A/RES/65/230
4.
Bearing in mind the universal character of the United Nations standards
and norms in crime prevention and criminal justice, we invite the Commission on
Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice to consider reviewing and, if necessary,
updating and supplementing them. In order to render them effective, we recommend
that appropriate efforts be made to promote the widest application of those standards
and norms and to raise awareness of them among authorities and entities responsible
for their application at the national level.
5.
We acknowledge the need for Member States to ensure effective gender
equality in crime prevention, access to justice and the protection offered by the
criminal justice system.
6.
We express deep concern about the pervasiveness of violence against
women in all its different forms and manifestations worldwide, and urge States to
enhance efforts to prevent, prosecute and punish violence against women. In this
regard, we note with appreciation the draft updated Model Strategies and Practical
Measures on the Elimination of Violence against Women in the Field of Crime
Prevention and Criminal Justice, as finalized by the intergovernmental expert group
at its meeting held in Bangkok from 23 to 25 March 2009, 10 and look forward to
their consideration by the Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice.
7.
We recognize the importance of adopting appropriate legislation and
policies to prevent victimization, including revictimization, and to provide
protection and assistance to victims.
8.
We consider that international cooperation and technical assistance can
play an important role in achieving sustainable and long-lasting results in the
prevention, prosecution and punishment of crime, in particular by building,
modernizing and strengthening our criminal justice systems and promoting the rule
of law. Specific technical assistance programmes should thus be designed to achieve
these aims, for all the components of the criminal justice system, in an integrated
way and with a long-term perspective, enabling the capacity of requesting States to
prevent and suppress the various types of crime affecting their societies, including
organized crime. In that regard, the experience and expertise accumulated over the
years by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime constitute a valuable asset.
9.
We strongly recommend the allocation of sufficient human and financial
resources to develop and implement effective policies, programmes and training
dealing with crime prevention, criminal justice and the prevention of terrorism. In
this regard, we stress the serious need to provide the United Nations Office on
Drugs and Crime with a level of resources commensurate with its mandate. We call
upon Member States and other international donors to support, and coordinate with,
the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, including its regional and country
offices, the institutes of the United Nations crime prevention and criminal justice
programme network and requesting States in the provision of technical assistance to
strengthen their capacity to prevent crime.
10. We acknowledge the leading role of the United Nations Office on Drugs
and Crime in providing technical assistance to facilitate the ratification and
implementation of the international instruments related to the prevention and
suppression of terrorism.
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Resolution 65/228, annex.