United Nations Security Council Resolution 1126

UN Security Council
Resolution 1126
Date: 27 August 1997
Meeting no.: 3,813
Code: S/RES/1126 (Document)

Vote: For: 15 Abs.: 0 Against: 0
Subject: Tribunal (Former Yugoslavia)
Result: Adopted

Security Council composition in 1997:
permanent members:

 CHN  FRA  RUS  UK  USA

non-permanent members:
 CHI  CRC  EGY  GBS  JPN
 KEN  KOR  POL  POR  SWE

Serbs from the Konjic area detained in the Čelebići camp. (Photograph provided courtesy of the ICTY)

United Nations Security Council Resolution 1126, adopted unanimously on August 27, 1997, after receiving a letter from the Secretary-General Kofi Annan, the Council endorsed his recommendation that judges Karibi-Whyte, Odio Benito and Jan, once they were replaced, finish the Čelebići case that they began before they ended their term of office. It also noted the intention of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia to finish the case by November 1998.[1]

Kofi Annan's letter stated that if the three judges could not complete the case, it would have been necessary to restart the trials of the suspects, which would prolong the trial and violate the right of the accused to due process of law.[1]

The Čelebići case related to a prisoner of war camp in Bosnia and Herzegovina where detainees were tortured and murdered.[2]

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