United Nations Security Council Resolution 2199

United Nations Security Council Resolution 2199 was unanimously approved on 12 February 2015 to combat terrorism. Drafted by Russia, its legally binding provisions gave the fifteen nations of the United Nations Security Council authority to enforce decisions with economic sanctions.[1] The resolution, in particular, emphasized "the need to combat by all means, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations and international law, [...] threats to international peace and security caused by terrorist acts".[2]

UN Security Council
Resolution 2199
Date12 February 2015
Meeting no.7,379
CodeS/RES/2199 (Document)
SubjectThreats to international peace and security caused by terrorist acts
Voting summary
  • 15 voted for
  • None voted against
  • None abstained
ResultAdopted
Security Council composition
Permanent members
Non-permanent members

Provisions

Resolution 2199 highlighted several financial measures to fight terrorism, such as asset freezing and closure of all financial sources of terrorism, including illegal drug trade and extraction of natural resources by terrorists.[2] The resolution also noted that the provisions of Resolution 2161 unconditionally ban the payment of ransom to terrorist groups in exchange for hostages.[2] The resolution also condemned the destruction of cultural heritage by ISIL and the Al-Nusrah Front.[2]

Under Resolution 2199 UN member states must report within 120 days to the Al-Qaida Sanctions Committee on their compliance with the resolution.[2] The resolution also asked the United Nations counter-terrorism bodies to supervise progress on the document's implementation.[2]

gollark: (chromebooks and other locked-down-but-with-web-access-and-stuff systems)
gollark: Weird how thin clients are increasingly becoming the trendy thing again, but in a different way to what people presumably thought.
gollark: Interestingly, you can run your own applications on it with some work (I made a RSS reader) and its browser appears to be kind of broken in a variety of ways and not enforce CORS.
gollark: My Kindle (the e-ink kind, not the android tablets) actually runs Linux using X, the "awesome" window manager, and some sort of vaguely horrible GUI which seems to be made with HTML/CSS/JS.
gollark: There's probably some window manager thing for single-purpose systems.

References

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