S/RES/2210 (2015)
importance of the ongoing monitoring and reporting to the United Nations Security
Council, of the situation of civilians and in particular civilian casualties, taking note
of the efforts made by Afghan and international forces in minimizing civilian
casualties, and noting the 18 February 2015 report by UNAMA on the protection of
civilians in armed conflict,
Expressing also concern with the serious threat that anti-personnel mines,
remnants of war and improvised explosive devices pose to the civilian population,
and stressing the need to refrain from the use of weapons and devices prohibited by
international law,
Encouraging the international community and regional partners to further
effectively support Afghan-led sustained efforts to address drug production and
trafficking in a balanced and integrated approach, including through the JCMB’s
working group on counter-narcotics as well as regional initiatives, and recognizing
the threat posed by the production, trade and trafficking of illicit drugs to
international peace and stability in different regions of the world, and the important
role played by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in this
regard,
Expressing concern at the continuing increase in poppy production as noted in
the UNODC Afghanistan Opium Survey 2014, noting the serious harm that opium
cultivation, production and trafficking and consumption continues to cause to the
stability, security, public health, social and economic development and governance
of Afghanistan as well as to the region and internationally, and stressing the
important role of the United Nations to continue to monitor the drug situation in
Afghanistan,
Stressing the need for coordinated regional efforts to combat the drug problem,
and in this regard, welcoming the Regional Ministerial Conference on CounterNarcotics in Islamabad on 12 and 13 November 2012, aimed at enhancing regional
cooperation to counter-narcotics,
Welcoming the ongoing work of the Paris Pact Initiative as one of the most
important frameworks in the fight against opiates originating in Afghanistan, taking
note of the Vienna Declaration, and emphasizing the aim of the Paris Pact to
establish a broad international coalition to combat the traffic of illicit opiates, as
part of a comprehensive approach to peace, stability, and development in
Afghanistan, the region and beyond,
Recalling the declaration addressed to the International Narcotics Control
Board (INCB) by the Government of Afghanistan that there is no legal use for acetic
anhydride in Afghanistan for the time being and that producing and exporting
countries should abstain from authorizing the export of this substance to
Afghanistan without the request from the Afghan Government, and encouraging,
pursuant to resolution 1817 (2008), Member States to increase their cooperation
with the INCB, notably by fully complying with the provisions of article 12 of the
United Nations Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and
Psychotropic Substances, 1988, and encouraging further international and regional
cooperation with a view to prevent the diversion and trafficking of chemic al
precursors into Afghanistan,
Supporting the Afghan Government’s continued ban of ammonium nitrate
fertilizer, urging prompt action to implement regulations for the control of all
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