01 Jan 2015, 09:14 am Print
The independent panel is also requested to “assess the probative value” of that information, after the Secretary-General submitted a note that included his assessment that the report of the Commission of Jurists on the Inquiry into Hammarskjöld’s death includes new evidence.
Member States are encouraged to release any relevant records in their possession and to provide relevant information related to the death of Hammarskjöld and others on accompanying him on an aircraft that crashed in what is on Wednesday Zambia on the night of 17-18 September 1961.
A UN Commission of Inquiry held between 1961 and 1962 reached an open verdict on the cause of the crash in which all the plane’s passengers and crew died and the General Assembly passed resolution 1759 in 1962 requesting the Secretary-General to inform the Assembly of “any new evidence which may come to his attention.”
The Secretary-General is requested to report to the General Assembly during its upcoming 70th session on progress made.
In a mid-March note to the 193-member Assembly, Ban informed Member States that the Inquiry into Hammarskjöld’s death (known informally as the “Hammarskjöld Commission”) had uncovered “new evidence…relating to the conditions and circumstances” relating to the former Secretary-General’s death.
“The unparalleled service and sacrifice of Dag Hammarskjöld and his legacy within the United Nations and beyond compel us to seek the whole truth of the circumstances leading to his tragic death and that of the members of the party accompanying him,” said Ban in the note.
Portrait of former Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld. UN Photo/JO (file)
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