UN Documents for Authorisations to Use Force: Secretary-General's Reports

Secretary-General's Reports Return to full list
28 June 2007 S/2007/392 This was a report of the Secretary-General on the Implementation of Security Council resolution 1701.
14 March 2007 S/2007/147 This was report on the implementation of resolution 1701.
12 September 2006 S/2006/730 This was the report on implementation of resolution 1701.
29 June 2006 S/2006/478 This was the report on the Ugandan rebel group, the Lord's Resistance Army, which has operated in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
22 May 2006 S/2006/310 This was the report of the Secretary-General pursuant to paragraphs 10and 14 of Security Council resolution 1649 (2005).
28 December 2005 S/2005/832 This was the twentieth report of the Secretary-General on the United Nations Organization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
21 August 2000 S/2000/809 This was the report of the Panel on the United Nations Peace Operations (also known as the Brahimi Report).
15 December 1999 S/1999/1257 This letter transmitted the report by the independent inquiry commission set up by the Secretary-General concluding that information about human rights must be a natural part of the basis for decision-making on peacekeeping operations, within the Secretariat and by the Security Council.
10 September 1992 S/24540 This was a report of the Secretary-General on UNPROFOR.
19 March 1978 S/12611 This was a report from the Secretary-General on Lebanon.
27 October 1973 S/11052/Rev.1 This was the report of the Secretary-General on the Middle East.
10 September 1964 S/5950 This report recognised that the presence of UNFICYP in Cyprus was a major factor in bringing the fighting in some areas to an end, and in preventing some incidents from escalating. The report also pointed out that a “return to normal conditions" as mentioned in Council resolution 186 does not mean, as the Turkish Cypriots believe, a complete restoration of the constitutional situation in Cyprus as it was before the fighting broke out in December 1963.