The situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly.
1994
Files
Notice détaillée
SymboleA/RES/49/10
TitreThe situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly.
AccèsEnglish: A_RES_49_10-EN - PDF ; Español: A_RES_49_10-ES - PDF ; Français: A_RES_49_10-FR - PDF ; Русский: A_RES_49_10-RU - PDF ; العربية: A_RES_49_10-AR - PDF ; 中文: A_RES_49_10-ZH - PDF ;
Résumé
Condemns the Bosnian Serb party for its refusal to accept the proposed territorial settlement, and demands that it immediately accept this settlement unconditionally and in full; lifts forthwith the siege of Sarajevo and other safe areas, as well as other besieged Bosnian towns; condemns the continuing military activities against the territory of the Republic of Croatia; strongly condemns the Serbian self-proclaimed authorities in the Serbian-controlled territories of Bosnia and Herzegovina for their actions in pursuit of the ethnic cleansing of those areas; demands that Yugoslavia uphold its commitment and obligation to comply with relevant Security Council resolutions and to cease any military and logistic support to the Bosnian Serbs, and supports the decision of the Council to terminate automatically the partial suspension of sanctions in the event that Yugoslavia is found not to implement effectively its decision to close the border between the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Federal Republic; requests the Security Council to act immediately to close all detention camps in Bosnia and Herzegovina and further to close concentration camps established by the Serbs in Serbia and Montenegro and in Bosnia and Herzegovina and to assign international observers to these camps and that the International Committee of the Red Cross be granted free access to all these detention camps (97-0-61, 51st meeting, 3 Nov. 1994).
Résumé de vote
Adopted 97-0-61, 51st plenary meeting
Compte rendu
A/49/PV.51
Date[New York] : UN, 8 Nov. 1994.
Description
7 p.
Notes
Adopted at the 51st plenary meeting, 3 Nov. 1994.