United Nations Security Council Resolution 67

United Nations Security Council Resolution 67, adopted on January 28, 1949, satisfied that both parties in the Indonesian Conflict continued to adhere to the principles of the Renville Agreement, the Council called upon the Netherlands to immediately discontinue all military operations and upon the Indonesian Republic to order its armed adherents to cease guerrilla warfare and for both parties to cooperate in the restoration of peace and the maintenance of law and order throughout the area. The Council further called upon the Netherlands to release all political prisoners arrested since December 17, 1948 and to facilitate the immediate return of officials of the Government of the Republic of Indonesia to Jogjakarta and afford to them such facilities as may reasonably be required by that Government for its effective functioning in that area.

UN Security Council
Resolution 67
DateJanuary 28 1949
Meeting no.406
CodeS/1234 (Document)
SubjectThe Indonesian Question
ResultAdopted
Security Council composition
Permanent members
Non-permanent members
← 66 Lists of resolutions 68 →

The Resolution then called for the creation of a federal 'United States of Indonesia' in which elections for constituents to a constituent assembly would be completed by October 1949 and to whom the Netherlands would transfer sovereignty of Indonesia to by July 1950. To that end the Council renamed the Committee of Good Offices to the United Nations Commission for Indonesia and charged it with all the duties of the old Committee as well as the observation of elections and guaranteeing freedom of assembly, speech and publication along with supervising the transfer of parts of Indonesia to the Republican Government and issuing periodic reports to the Council.

The resolution was voted on in parts; no vote was taken on the text as a whole.

United Nations Commissions edit

United Nations Good Offices Commission (1947) edit

Good Offices Commission[a] (Indonesian: Komisi Tiga Negara) was a United Nations commission established in August 25, 1947 on the basis of the United Nations Security Council Resolution 31 as a mediator for the conflict between the newly established Republic of Indonesia and the Kingdom of the Netherlands.[1]

The Committee of Good Offices consisted of three countries, each countries were chosen by both Indonesia and the Netherlands as a representatives and mediator for a ceasefire and peace agreement. The countries were The United States, chosen by both sides as a mediator, Belgium, chosen by the Dutch side, and Australia, chosen by Indonesian side. The United States was represented by Frank Porter Graham, Belgium was represented by Paul Van Zeeland, and Australia was represented by Richard C. Kirby.[2][3]

The UN Good Offices Commission was the first UN peacekeeping mission for Australia.[4]

United Nations Commission for Indonesia edit

The United Nations Commission for Indonesia (Abbreviated: UNCI; Indonesian: Komisi PBB untuk Indonesia) was a United Nations commission formed to replace the Good Offices Commission. The purpose of UNCI was to continue the duties of the previous commission, while at the same time overseeing the handover of the Indonesian territory to the republican government and reporting regularly to the United Nations Security Council. UNCI was formed after the Good Offices Commission was deemed to have failed to reconcile the conflict.[5] UNCI played an important role in the Dutch–Indonesian Round Table Conference.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Committee of Good Offices on the Indonesian question : 1st interim report of the Committee to the Security Council". United Nations Digital Library. 1948. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  2. ^ "Renville Agreement | Netherlands-Indonesia [1948]". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2020-11-03.
  3. ^ "Peran Australia dalam Perundingan Renville". Historia.id (in Indonesian). 2020-10-02. Retrieved 2020-12-14.
  4. ^ "United Nations Commission for Indonesia (UNCI) 1949 - 1950". The Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 2020-11-03.
  5. ^ Agha, Issam Abdul (1961). The United Nations and national independence: the Indonesian question: A peaceful settlement; the Algerian problem: A case study in evolution study in evolution (Thesis thesis). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers.
  1. ^ also spelled Committee of Good Offices

External links edit