Security Council underlines need for stronger judicial cooperation to combat terrorism
12 December 2016 – Condemning acts of terrorism and their impact on innocent civilians and on peace and stability, the United Nations Security Council emphasized the need for establishing wilful violation of prohibition on financing of terrorist organizations or individual terrorists as serious criminal offenses in national laws and regulations.
The adoption of this resolution comes against the backdrop of at-least three major terrorist attacks around the globe this weekend. Turkey’s capital, Istanbul; Egypt’s capital, Cairo; and Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu, each were targets of terrorist bombings and attacks that killed many civilians and injured many more.
Further in the resolution today, the Council also called upon countries to consider the possibility of allowing, through appropriate laws and mechanisms, the transfer of criminal proceedings, as appropriate, in terrorist-related cases as well as enhancing cooperation to prevent terrorists from benefiting from transnational organized crime as well as to investigate and to build the capacity to prosecute such terrorists and transnational organized criminals working with them.
The adoption of the resolution was followed by a high-level meeting of the Security Council on the theme of ‘international judicial cooperation in countering terrorism.’
Presided over by the Minister of Justice of Spain, Rafael Catalá Polo, the meeting was participated in my senior officials and representatives of countries including, inter alia, Angola, China, Egypt, France, Japan, Russia, the United States and the United Kingdom.
The meeting also heard briefings from Jean-Paul Laborde, the Executive Director of the Counter-Terrorism Executive Directorate of the UN; Dorcas Oduor, the Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions in Kenya; and Robert Strang, the Executive Secretary of the International Institute for Justice and the Rule of Law.
Copyright mediaforfreedom.com