S/RES/2274 (2016)
measures that focus on the rehabilitation and reintegration for children formerly
associated with armed forces and armed groups and to ensure they are treated in
accordance with international juvenile justice standards, including as outlined in the
Convention on the Rights of the Child and the International Covenant for Civil and
Political Rights;
48. Notes with strong concern the effects of corruption on security, good
governance, counter-narcotics efforts and economic development, welcomes the
anti-corruption commitments made by the Government of Afghanistan at the Tokyo
Conference in 2012 and reinforced in September 2015 in the Self -Reliance through
Mutual Accountability Framework (SMAF), welcomes the efforts of the
Government of Afghanistan in this regard, including the issuance of the presidential
decree in July 2012, calls for continued action by the Government to fulfil those
commitments in order to establish a more effective, accountable and transparent
administration at the national, provincial and local levels of government and also
welcomes continued international support for Afghanistan’s governance objectives;
49. Encourages all Afghan institutions, including the executive and
legislative branches, to work in a spirit of cooperation, recognizes the Afghan
Government’s continued efforts in pursuing legislative and public administration
reform in order to tackle corruption and to ensure good governance, as agreed at the
Bonn Conference, with full representation of all Afghan women and men, and
accountability at both national and subnational levels, and stresses the need for
further international efforts to provide technical assistance in this area, and
recognizes the Government of Afghanistan efforts in this regard;
50. Calls for full respect for and protection for all human rights and
fundamental freedoms, including those of human rights defenders, and of
international humanitarian law throughout Afghanistan, welcomes the growth in
Afghan free media, but notes with concern the continued restrictions on freedom of
media, and attacks against journalists by terrorist as well as extremist and criminal
groups, commends the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission
(AIHRC) for its courageous efforts to monitor respect for human rights in
Afghanistan as well as to foster and protect these rights and to promote the
emergence of a pluralistic civil society, stresses the importance of full cooperation
with the AIHRC by all relevant actors and promoting their independence as well as
of ensuring their safety, and supports broad engagement across government agencies
and civil society for the realization of the mutual commitments made, including the
commitment to provide sufficient government financing for the AIHRC, reiterates
the important role of the AIHRC, and supports the efforts of the AIHRC to
strengthen its institutional capacity and independence within the framework of the
Afghan Constitution;
51. Recognizes that despite progress achieved on gender equality, enhanced
efforts, including on measurable and action-oriented objectives, are necessary to
secure the rights and full participation of women and girls and to ensure that all
women and girls in Afghanistan are protected from violence and abuse, that
perpetrators of such violence and abuse are held accountable, and that women and
girls enjoy equal protection under the law and equal access to justice, welcomes the
publication, in June 2015, of the National Action Plan for the implementation of the
Security Council resolution 1325 (2000), emphasizes the importance of maintaining
adequate legislative protections for women, and of ensuring that women fleeing
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