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Secretariat
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 May 2009
Extract
Annual Report of the Secretary-General: In the introduction to the eighth annual report ofthe Secretary-General on the work of the United Nations, which covered the period of July 1, 1953, to June 30, 1954, Dag Hammarskjold reviewed the role of the United Nations in the maintenance of peace and security in the light of the recent cessation of fighting in Korea and in Indochina. He stated that while every effort to further the purposes of the United Nations, even if outside the framework of the organization, should be welcomed, although such developments might weaken the prestige and effectiveness of the United Nations. More specifically, he noted that while the use of regional arrangements, when appropriate, was encouraged in the Charter, “where resort to such arrangements is chosen in the first instance, that choice should not be permitted to cast any doubt on the ultimate responsibility of the United Nations”. Mr. Hammarskjold expressed belief in the need for new approaches to peace inthe light of the failure of the subcommittee set up by the Disarmament Commission to reach any agreement at London. He took special note of the absence from the United Nations of “almost half the countries of Europe” as well as statesin other areas. The Secretary-General felt that the situation in the middle easthad deteriorated during the period under review; the United Nations had aspecial responsibility there, and should search for ways to eliminate points of friction not involving questions of principle, until such time as it would be possible to achieve a genuine peace settlement.
- Type
- International Organizations: Summary of Activities: I. United Nations
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The IO Foundation 1954
References
1 General Assembly, Official Records(9th session), Supplement 1. For information on the Korean phase of the Geneva Conference, see this volume, p. 498.
2 Ibid., p. xi.
3 See this volume, p. 518.
4 General Assembly, Official Records (9th session), Supplement 1, p. xiv. For further information on the organization of the secretariat, see this volume, p. 553.
5 Ibid., p. xv.
6 Other chapters covered political and security questions, developments in the economic and social field, questions concerning trustee-ship and non-self-governing territories, and legal questions.Since the information in these chapters dealt with the activities of the various United Nations organs during the period under review, information which had already been summarized in these volumes, it was not included in the present summary.
7 General Assembly, Official Records (9th for the advisory session), Supplement 1, p. 117.
8 For the discussion at the eighth session opinion of the General Assemblyon appropriating funds to give effect to the awards of compensation, see International Organization, VIII, p. 112; for the advisory of the International Court of Justice on the effect of awards of compensation made by the Administrative Tribunal, see this volume, p. 555.
9 Document A/2731.
10 For a summary of trie financial implications of the reorganization as estimated by the Secretary-General, see this volume, p. 504.
11 New York Times, August 20, 1954.