RESOLUTION 1034 (1995)
Adopted by the Security Council at its 3612th
meeting,
on 21 December 1995
The Security Council,
Reaffirming all its earlier relevant resolutions on the
situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina, including its resolution 1019 (1995) of
9 November 1995 and condemning the Bosnian Serb party's failure,
despite repeated calls that it should do so, to comply with the demands
contained therein,
Having considered the report of the Secretary-General pursuant
to resolution 1019 (1995) on violations of international humanitarian law in
the areas of Srebrenica, Zepa, Banja Luka and Sanski Most of 27 November
1995 (S/1995/988),
Gravely concerned at the information contained in the
above-mentioned report that there is overwhelming evidence of a consistent
pattern of summary executions, rape, mass expulsion, arbitrary detentions,
forced labour and large-scale disappearances,
Reiterating its strong support for the work of the
International Tribunal established pursuant to its resolution 827 (1993) of
25 May 1993,
Noting that the General Framework Agreement for Peace in Bosnia
and Herzegovina and the Annexes thereto (collectively the Peace Agreement,
S/1995/999, annex) initialled at Dayton, Ohio, on 21 November 1995 provides
that no person who is serving a sentence imposed by the International
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, and no person who is under indictment by
the Tribunal and who has failed to comply with an order to appear before the
Tribunal, may stand as a candidate or hold any appointive, elective, or
other public office in Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Condemning the failure of the Bosnian Serb party to comply with
their commitments in respect of giving access to displaced persons and to
persons detained or reported missing,
Reiterating its concern expressed in the statement of its
President of 7 December 1995 (S/PRST/1995/60),
Deeply concerned by the plight of hundreds of thousands of
refugees and displaced persons as a result of hostilities in the former
Yugoslavia,
1.Strongly condemns all violations of international
humanitarian law and of human rights in the territory of the former
Yugoslavia and demands that all concerned comply fully with their
obligations in this regard and reiterates that all those who commit
violations of international humanitarian law will be held individually
responsible in respect of such acts;
2.Condemns in particular in the strongest possible terms
the violations of international humanitarian law and of human rights by
Bosnian Serb and paramilitary forces in the areas of Srebrenica, Zepa, Banja
Luka and Sanski Most as described in the report of the Secretary- General of
27 November 1995 and showing a consistent pattern of summary executions,
rape, mass expulsions, arbitrary detentions, forced labour and large-scale
disappearances;
3.Notes with the utmost concern the substantial evidence
referred to in the report of the Secretary- General of 27 November 1995 that
an unknown but large number of men in the area of Srebrenica, namely in Nova
Kasaba-Konjevic Polje (Kaldrumica), Kravice, Rasica Gai, Zabrde and two
sites in Karakaj, and possibly also in Bratunac and Potocari, have been
summarily executed by Bosnian Serb and paramilitary forces and
condemns in the strongest terms the commission of such acts;
4.Reiterates its strong support for the efforts of the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in seeking access to
displaced persons and to persons detained or reported missing and calls on
all parties to comply with their commitments in respect of such access;
5.Reaffirms its demand that the Bosnian Serb party give
immediate and unimpeded access to representatives of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees, the ICRC and other international agencies to
persons displaced and to persons detained or reported missing from
Srebrenica, Zepa and the regions of Banja Luka and Sanski Most who are
within the areas of Bosnia and Herzegovina under the control of Bosnian Serb
forces and that the Bosnian Serb party permit representatives of the ICRC
(i) to visit and register any persons detained against their will, whether
civilians or members of the forces of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and (ii) to
have access to any site it may deem important;
6.Affirms that the violations of humanitarian law and
human rights in the areas of Srebrenica, Zepa, Banja Luka and Sanski Most
from July to October 1995 must be fully and properly investigated by the
relevant United Nations and other international organizations and
institutions;
7.Takes note that the International Tribunal established
pursuant to resolution 827 (1993) of 25 May 1993 issued on 16 November 1995
indictments against the Bosnian Serb leaders Radovan Karadzic and Ratko
Mladic for their direct and individual responsibilities for the atrocities
committed against the Bosnian Muslim population of Srebrenica in July 1995;
8.Reaffirms its demand that the Bosnian Serb party give
immediate and unrestricted access to the areas in question, including for
the purpose of the investigation of the atrocities, to representatives of the
relevant United Nations and other international organizations and
institutions, including the Special Rapporteur of the Commission on Human
Rights;
9.Underlines in particular the urgent necessity for all
the parties to enable the Prosecutor of the International Tribunal to gather
effectively and swiftly the evidence necessary for the Tribunal to perform
its task;
10.Stresses the obligations of all the parties to
cooperate with and provide unrestricted access to the relevant United
Nations and other international organizations and institutions so as to
facilitate their investigations and takes note of their commitment
under the Peace Agreement in this regard;
11.Reiterates its demand that all parties, and in
particular the Bosnian Serb party, refrain from any action intended to
destroy, alter, conceal or damage any evidence of violations of
international humanitarian law and that they preserve such evidence;
12.Reiterates further its demand that all States, in
particular those in the region of the former Yugoslavia, and all parties to
the conflict in the former Yugoslavia, comply fully and in good faith with
the obligations contained in paragraph 4 of resolution 827 (1993) to
cooperate fully with the International Tribunal and calls on them
to create the conditions essential for the Tribunal to perform the task for
which it has been created, including the establishment of offices of the
Tribunal when the latter deems it necessary;
13.Reiterates its demand that all detention camps
throughout the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina should be immediately
closed;
14.Urges the parties to ensure full respect for the norms
of international humanitarian law and of human rights of the civilian
population, living in the areas in Bosnia and Herzegovina now under their
control, which under the Peace Agreement will be transferred to another
party;
15.Condemns the widespread looting and destruction of
houses and other property, in particular by HVO forces in the area of
Mrkonjic Grad and Sipovo, and demands that all sides immediately
stop such action, investigate them and make sure that those who violated the
law be held individually responsible in respect of such acts;
16.Demands that all sides refrain from laying mines, in
particular in those areas now under their control, which under the Peace
Agreement will be transferred to another party;
17.Urges Member States to continue to assist the efforts
of the United Nations, humanitarian agencies and non-governmental
organizations under way in the former Yugoslavia to alleviate the plight of
hundreds of thousands of refugees and displaced persons;
18.Also urges all the parties to the conflicts in the
territory of the former Yugoslavia to fully cooperate with these efforts
with the view to create conditions, conducive to the repatriation and return of
refugees and displaced persons in safety and dignity;
19.Requests the Secretary-General to keep the Council
regularly informed on progress reached in the investigation of the
violations of international humanitarian law referred to in the report
mentioned above;
20.Decides to remain actively seized of the matter.
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