United Nations Security Council Resolution 956

UN Security Council
Resolution 956
Date: 10 November 1994
Meeting no.: 3,455
Code: S/RES/956 (Document)

Vote: For: 15 Abs.: 0 Against: 0
Subject: Palau
Result: Adopted

Security Council composition in 1994:
permanent members:

 CHN  FRA  RUS  UK  USA

non-permanent members:
 ARG  BRA  CZE  DJI  ESP
 NGA  NZL  OMA  PAK  RWA

Palau

United Nations Security Council Resolution 956, adopted unanimously on November 10, 1994, after recalling Chapter XII of the United Nations Charter which established the United Nations Trusteeship system and Resolution 21 (1947) which approved the Trusteeship Territory of the Japanese Mandated Islands (since known as the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands), the Council determined that, in the light of entry into force of a new status agreement for the Republic of Palau, the objectives of the Trusteeship Agreement had been completed and therefore ended the status of Palau as a Trust Territory.[1]

The Council noted that the United States was the Administering Authority of the Trust Territory and was satisfied that the people of Palau had freely exercised their right to self-determination in approving the new status agreement. Approval for Palau to join the United Nations was given in Resolution 963.

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