FNs Sikkerhedsråd: Bekæmp Islamisk Stat i dens højborge

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Enigheden i Sikkerhedsrådet kommer efter måneder med uenighed mellem Vesten og Rusland om Syrien.

NEW YORK, 20 November 2015 (UN News Service): The United Nations Security Council Friday called on all countries that can do so to take the war on terrorism to Islamic State-controlled territory in Syria and Iraq and destroy its safe haven.

The Council warned that the group intends to mount further terror attacks like those that devastated Paris and Beirut last week.

The 15-member body declared the group’s attacks abroad “a global and unprecedented threat” following the “horrifying terrorist attacks” it perpetrated recently in Sousse (Tunisia), Ankara (Turkey), over Sinai (Egypt) with the downing of a Russian plane, and in Beirut and Paris.

It warned that the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), or Da’esh as it is also known, “has the capability and intention to carry out” further strikes and called upon “Member States that have the capacity to do so to take all necessary measures, in compliance with international law, in particular international human rights, refugee and humanitarian law” on its territory.

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Condemning “in the strongest terms” ISIL and other terrorist groups in the region such Al-Nusrah Front, the Council urged Member States “to eradicate the safe haven they have established over significant parts of Iraq and Syria.”

It called on Member States to intensify efforts to stem the flow of foreign terrorist fighters to Iraq and Syria and to prevent and suppress the financing of terrorism, and reaffirmed that those responsible for terrorist acts, violations of international humanitarian law or violations or abuses of human rights must be held accountable.

It cited “the continued gross, systematic and widespread abuses of human rights and violations of humanitarian law, as well as barbaric acts of destruction and looting of cultural heritage” carried out by ISIL.

ISIL constitutes “a global and unprecedented threat to international peace and security,” the Council stressed.

This is so because of “its violent extremist ideology, its terrorist acts, its continued gross systematic and widespread attacks directed against civilians, abuses of human rights and violations of international humanitarian law, including those driven on religious or ethnic ground, its eradication of cultural heritage and trafficking of cultural property”.