GE.17-17509(E)



Human Rights Council Thirty-sixth session

11–29 September 2017

Agenda item 3

Resolution adopted by the Human Rights Council on 28 September 2017

36/3. The use of mercenaries as a means of violating human rights

and impeding the exercise of the right of peoples to self-

determination

The Human Rights Council,

Recalling all previous resolutions adopted by the General Assembly, the Human

Rights Council and the Commission on Human Rights on the subject, including Assembly

resolution 64/151 of 18 December 2009 and Council resolutions 10/11 of 26 March 2009,

15/12 of 30 September 2010, 15/26 of 1 October 2010, 18/4 of 29 September 2011, 24/13

of 26 September 2013, 27/10 of 25 September 2014, 30/6 of 1 October 2015 and 33/4 of 29

September 2016,

Recalling also all relevant resolutions that, inter alia, condemn any State that permits

or tolerates the recruitment, financing, training, assembly, transit or use of mercenaries with

the objective of overthrowing the Governments of States Members of the United Nations,

especially those of developing countries, or of fighting against national liberation

movements, and recalling further the relevant resolutions and international instruments

adopted by the General Assembly, the Security Council, the Economic and Social Council,

the African Union and the Organization of African Unity, inter alia, the Organization of

African Unity Convention for the Elimination of Mercenarism in Africa,

Reaffirming the purposes and principles enshrined in the Charter of the United

Nations concerning the strict observance of the principles of sovereign equality, political

independence, the territorial integrity of States, the self-determination of peoples, the non-

use of force or threat of use of force in international relations and non-interference in affairs

within the domestic jurisdiction of States,

Reaffirming also that, by virtue of the principle of self-determination, all peoples

have the right to determine freely their political status and to pursue freely their economic,

social and cultural development, and that every State has the duty to respect this right in

accordance with the provisions of the Charter,

Reaffirming further the Declaration on Principles of International Law concerning

Friendly Relations and Cooperation among States in accordance with the Charter of the

United Nations,

Extremely alarmed and concerned about the threat posed by the activities of

mercenaries to peace and security in developing countries in various parts of the world, in

particular in areas of conflict, and about the threat they pose to the integrity of and respect

for the constitutional order of the countries affected,

Deeply concerned at the loss of life, the substantial damage to property and the

negative effects on the policies and economies of affected countries resulting from

international criminal mercenary activities,

Convinced that, regardless of the way in which mercenaries or mercenary-related

activities are used or the form that they take to acquire a semblance of legitimacy, they are

a threat to peace, security and the self-determination of peoples and an obstacle to the

enjoyment of human rights by peoples,

1. Reaffirms that the use of mercenaries, and their recruitment, financing,

protection and training, are causes for grave concern to all States and violate the purposes

and principles enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations;

2. Recognizes that armed conflicts, terrorism, arms trafficking and covert

operations by third Powers encourage, inter alia, the demand for mercenaries and for

private military and security companies on the global market;

3. Urges once again all States to take the necessary steps and to exercise the

utmost vigilance against the threat posed by the activities of mercenaries, and to take

legislative measures to ensure that their territories and other territories under their control,

and their nationals, are not used for the recruitment, assembly, financing, training,

protection and transit of mercenaries for the planning of activities designed to impede the

right to self-determination, to overthrow the Government of any State or to dismember or to

impair, totally or in part, the territorial integrity or political unity of sovereign and

independent States conducting themselves in compliance with the right of peoples to self-

determination;

4. Requests all States to exercise the utmost vigilance against any kind of

recruitment, training, hiring or financing of mercenaries;

5. Also requests all States to exercise the utmost vigilance in banning the use of

private companies offering international military consultancy and security services when

intervening in armed conflicts or actions to destabilize constitutional regimes;

6. Calls upon all States that have not yet become a party to the International

Convention against the Recruitment, Use, Financing and Training of Mercenaries to

consider taking the necessary action to do so;

7. Welcomes the cooperation extended by those countries that were visited by

the Working Group on the use of mercenaries as a means of violating human rights and

impeding the exercise of the right of peoples to self-determination, and the adoption by

some States of national legislation that restricts the recruitment, assembly, financing,

training and transit of mercenaries;

8. Condemns mercenary activities in developing countries in various parts of the

world, in particular in areas of conflict, and the threat they pose to the integrity of and

respect for the constitutional order of those countries and to the exercise of the right to self-

determination of their peoples, and stresses the importance for the Working Group of

looking into sources and root causes, and into the political motivations of mercenaries and

for mercenary-related activities;

9. Calls upon States to investigate the possibility of mercenary and mercenary-

related involvement whenever and wherever criminal acts of a terrorist nature occur and to

bring to trial those found responsible or to consider their extradition, if so requested, in

accordance with national law and applicable bilateral or international treaties;

10. Recognizes that mercenary activity is a complex crime in which criminal

responsibility falls upon those who have recruited, employed, trained and financed the

mercenary or mercenaries, and upon those who have planned and ordered their criminal

activity;

11. Condemns any form of impunity granted to perpetrators of mercenary

activities and to those responsible for the use, recruitment, financing and training of

mercenaries, and urges all States, in accordance with their obligations under international

law, to bring them, without distinction, to justice;

12. Calls upon the international community and all States, in accordance with

their obligations under international law, to cooperate with and assist the judicial

prosecution of those accused of mercenary activities, in transparent, open and fair trials;

13. Acknowledges with appreciation the work and contributions of the Working

Group, including its research activities, and welcomes its most recent report;1

14. Requests the Working Group and other experts to continue their participation,

including by submitting contributions, in other subsidiary bodies of the Human Rights

Council considering issues related to the use of mercenaries and mercenary-related

activities in all their forms and manifestations, including private military and security

companies;

15. Requests the Working Group to continue the work already carried out by

previous mandate holders on the strengthening of the international legal framework for the

prevention and sanction of the recruitment, use, financing and training of mercenaries,

taking into account the proposal for a new legal definition of the term “mercenary” drafted

by the Special Rapporteur on the use of mercenaries as a means of violating human rights

and impeding the exercise of the right of peoples to self-determination in his report

submitted to the Commission on Human Rights at its sixtieth session,2 and also the

evolving phenomenon of mercenaries and its related forms;

16. Also requests the Working Group to continue to monitor mercenaries and

mercenary-related activities in all their forms and manifestations, and private military and

security companies, in different parts of the world, including instances of protection

provided by Governments to individuals involved in mercenary activities, and to continue

to update the database of individuals convicted of mercenary activities;

17. Further requests the Working Group to continue to study and identify

sources and causes, emerging issues, manifestations and trends with regard to mercenaries

and mercenary-related activities and their impact on human rights, particularly on the right

of peoples to self-determination;

18. Urges all States to cooperate fully with the Working Group in the fulfilment

of its mandate;

19. Requests the Secretary-General and the United Nations High Commissioner

for Human Rights to provide the Working Group with all the assistance and support

necessary for the fulfilment of its mandate, both professional and financial, including by

1 A/HRC/36/47.

2 E/CN.4/2004/15.

promoting cooperation between the Working Group and other components of the United

Nations system that deal with countering mercenary-related activities, in order to meet the

demands of its current and future activities;

20. Requests the Working Group to consult States, intergovernmental and non-

governmental organizations and other relevant civil society actors in the implementation of

the present resolution, and to report its findings on the use of mercenaries as a means of

violating human rights and impeding the exercise of the right of peoples to self-

determination to the General Assembly at its seventy-third session and to the Human Rights

Council at its thirty-ninth session;

21. Decides to continue its consideration of this matter under the same agenda

item at its thirty-ninth session.

39th meeting

28 September 2017

[Adopted by a recorded vote of 32 to 15, with no abstentions. The voting was as follows:

In favour:

Bangladesh, Bolivia (Plurinational State of), Botswana, Brazil, Burundi,

China, Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, Cuba, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, Ethiopia,

Ghana, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Nigeria,

Panama, Paraguay, Philippines, Qatar, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, South Africa,

Togo, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of)

Against:

Albania, Belgium, Croatia, Georgia, Germany, Hungary, Japan, Latvia,

Netherlands, Portugal, Republic of Korea, Slovenia, Switzerland, United

Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, United States of America]