United Nations Security Council Resolution 1844

UN Security Council
Resolution 1844
Date: 20 November 2008
Meeting no.: 6,019
Code: S/RES/1844

Vote: For: 15 Abs.: 0 Against: 0
Subject: The situation in Somalia
Result: Adopted

Security Council composition in 2008:
permanent members:

 CHN  FRA  RUS  UK  USA

non-permanent members:
 BUR  BEL  CRC  CRO  INA
 ITA  LBY  PAN  RSA  VIE

United Nations Security Council Resolution 1844 was unanimously adopted on 20 November 2008.

Contents

Resolution

The Security Council today strengthened the arms embargo on the violence-plagued nation of Somalia by specifying sanctions on violators and expanding the mandate of the Committee that oversees the ban.

Through the unanimous adoption of resolution 1844 (2008), and acting under the Charter’s Chapter VII, the Council decided that travel restrictions and an asset freeze would be applied to individuals and entities that engaged in activities that threatened the peace and the political processes and obstructed humanitarian assistance, in addition to those that breached the weapons ban, which was put in place by resolution 733 of 1992 and amended by subsequent resolutions.

The Council charged the Committee set up by resolution 733 (1992) with the task of examining allegations of violations of the arms embargo, designating individuals and entities to be on a list of those subjected to sanctions and regularly reviewing that list for accuracy. It would also consider requests for humanitarian exemptions and report at least every 120 days to the Council.

In a related provision, Member States were encouraged to submit to the Committee the names of individuals or entities to be included on the list, along with a detailed statement of the case against them. The Council urged such States to review petitions for de-listing and encouraged the Committee to ensure that fair and clear procedures existed for listing, de-listing and granting exemptions. [1]

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