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A/58/755 - S/2004/227 (The Situation in Afghanistan and Its Implications for International Peace and Security)

Author(s): United Nations General Assembly/Security Council; Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination; Permanent Mission of Liechtenstein to the United Nations

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Abstract: Recommendations in this report focus on state building and pressing security concerns in Afghanistan and the region. They address the urgent need for establishing security and building of state and society which are closely interconnected, and note that solutions have to be holistic. Underscoring the intertwined nature of security building and state building, delivery of immediate and effective international financial assistance to both security and state-building endeavors is stressed, especially related to the international community delivering promised assistance and devoting greater resources to building Afghanistan’s policing and military capacity in order to meet the needs for fair and free elections in June 2004. The recommendations note that Afghanistan is a sovereign state, and the international community can only offer its assistance to Afghanistan in order to become a fully viable member of the international community. The recommendations were the product of discussions undertaken as part of a colloquium sponsored by the Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination at Princeton University in October 2003. These recommendations were circulated by the Permanent Representative of Liechtenstein to the United Nations in the April 2004 UN document A/58/755 - S/2004/227.
Publication Date: Apr-2004
Citation: A/58/755 - S/2004/227
Keywords: Afghanistan
State
Security
PRTs
Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration
Drug Trafficking
Civil Service
Police
Elections
Economy
Type of Material: Other



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