S/RES/1974 (2011)
sustainable defence planning process as well as assistance in defence reform
initiatives;
26. Takes note of the ongoing efforts of the Afghan authorities to enhance the
capabilities of the Afghan National Police, calls for further efforts towards that goal
and stresses the importance, in this context, of international assistance through
financial support and provision of trainers and mentors, including the contribution
of the NATO Training Mission-Afghanistan, the European Gendarmerie Force
(EGF) contribution to this mission and the European Union through its police
mission (EUPOL Afghanistan);
27. Welcomes the progress in the implementation by the Afghan Government
of the programme of disbandment of illegal armed groups and its integration with
the Afghanistan Peace and Reintegration Programme, and calls for accelerated and
harmonized efforts for further progress, with support from the international
community;
28. Takes note of the recent progress in addressing and the drop in opium
production, remains concerned at the serious harm that opium cultivation,
production and trafficking and consumption continue to cause to the security,
development and governance of Afghanistan as well as to the region and
internationally, calls on the Afghan Government, with the assistance of the
international community, to accelerate the implementation of the National Drug
Control Strategy, including through alternative livelihood programmes, and to
mainstream counter-narcotics throughout national programmes, and encourages
additional international support for the four priorities identified in that Strategy;
commends the support provided by the UNODC to the Triangular Initiative and the
Central Asian Regional Coordination and Information Centre (CARICC) within the
framework of the Paris Pact Initiative and the Rainbow Strategy; as well as the
contribution of Domodedovo Police Academy of Russia;
29. Calls upon States to strengthen international and regional cooperation to
counter the threat to the international community posed by the production,
trafficking, and consumption of illicit drugs originating in Afghanistan, in
accordance with the principle of common and shared responsibility in addressing the
drug problem of Afghanistan including through strengthening the law enforcement
capacity and cooperation against the trafficking in illicit drugs and precursor
chemicals and money-laundering and corruption linked to such trafficking, notes the
proposed Third Ministerial Conference on Drug Trafficking Routes from
Afghanistan to be held in 2011 within the framework of the Paris Pact initiative and
its “Paris-Moscow” process, and, in this regard, calls for full implementation of its
resolution 1817 (2008);
30. Calls for the continuation of the Paris Pact initiative in countering the
production, trafficking and consumption of opium and heroin from Afghanistan and
the elimination of poppy crops, drug laboratories and stores as well as the
interception of drug convoys, underlines the importance of border management
cooperation and welcomes the intensified cooperation of the relevant United Nations
institutions with the OSCE and the Collective Security Treaty Organization in this
regard;
31. Reiterates the importance of the full, sequenced, timely and coordinated
implementation of the National Priority Programme on Law and Justice for All, by
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