Affichage de 1614 résultats

Description archivistique
S-0950 · Série organique · 1991 - 2003
Fait partie de United Nations Iraq-Kuwait Observation Mission (UNIKOM) (1991-2003)

Series contains UNIKOM patrol maps, hand-drawn wall maps, and annotated United Nations maps of the Iraq-Kuwait border region. North Sector, South Sector, and Maritime Sector patrol maps (scale 1 : 100,000), are arranged chronologically and dated 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001 and 2002. Also included in the series are patrol map user's manuals, helicopter landing site directories and a small number of miscellaneous working papers.

Maps are chiefly laminated.

maps need to be re-housed/processed upon arrival of archival materials
Title based on series contents.

Issues
S-1095 · Série organique · 1991 - 2006
Fait partie de Secretary-General Kofi Annan (1997-2006)

Records in the series pertain to trouble spots in the following countries and regions: Afghanistan, Cyprus, East Timor, Kashmir, Korea, the Middle East and Western Sahara. Included in trouble spot files for Afghanistan are records pertaining to the emergence of the Taliban, reconstruction and development of the state, operations of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) and the status of women. Trouble spot files for East Timor pertain to the transitional administrations governing East Timor before its independence from Indonesia and document Sergio Vieira de Mello's service as United Nations Transitional Administrator (1999-2002). Trouble spot files for Africa include records concerning the resolution of conflict in the African Great Lakes region. Trouble spot files also pertain to ethnic and territorial conflict between Ethiopia and Eritrea and the work of the United Nations Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE) in the region. Records in the series also document territorial conflict between Guyana and Venezuela. Also documented in the series are the efforts of the United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO). Files associated with the Iraq invasion of Kuwait in August of 1990 concern the United Nations Special Commission (UNSCOM), United Nations Compensation Commission (UNCC), United Nations Iraq-Kuwait Observer Mission (UNIKOM) and the United Nations Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC). Files in the series which pertain to terrorism include records pertaining to missing persons and the taking of hostages; the Lockerbie air disaster (PANAM 103); and the development of the United Nations Global Counter Terrorism Strategy. Series also contains records pertaining to the Millennium Summit (2000) and the World Peace Summit (2000) and follow up material pertaining to the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (1992). Records consist of correspondence, reports, notes, memoranda, code cables and United Nations press releases.

S-0299 · Série organique · 1990 - 1991
Fait partie de United Nations Office for Special Political Affairs (1955-1991)

UN. Office of the Under-Secretary-General for Special Political Affairs (1986-1992: Goulding)

Series consists of correspondence, numbered code cables (incoming and outgoing), reports, memoranda, press releases, and United Nations documents regarding the United Nations Observers for Verification of Elections in Haiti (ONUVEH) mission to monitor the electoral process in Haiti. Subjects include selection and security of election observers, election procedures and voter turnout; the social, political and military situation in Haiti, and the attempted coup d'etat of 7January 1991; and administrative matters. Correspondents include Personal Representative of the Secretary-General for Haiti Joao Augusto de Medicis and ONUVEH Chief Electoral Officer Horacio Boneo.

Accession numbers: 92/149, box 1

Actual series size: 3 boxes

Chore

S-1084 · Série organique · 1990 - 1997
Fait partie de Secretary-General Boutros Boutros Ghali (1992-1996)

Series documents activities between the United Nations and governments and organizations having observer status, including Switzerland, Monaco, the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) and the Holy See. Series consists of correspondence, reports from the General Assembly, memoranda and cryptofaxes.

S-1835 · Série organique · 1990 - 1996
Fait partie de International Conference on the Former Yugoslavia (ICFY) (1992-1993)

Records contained in S-1835 document political coordination and negotiation led by the Co-Chairmen of the International Conference on the Former Yugoslavia (ICFY) with former Yugoslav leaders in partnership with the European Community, United Nations agencies, and intergovernmental organizations. The records also document the Co-Chairmen’s internal discussions with high-level officials in the Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO), the Department of Political Affairs (DPA), and the United Nations Protection Force (UNPROFOR).

S-1835 contains records of the ICFY’s Steering Committee, which was established at The London Conference held on 26-27 August 1992. Records of the Steering Committee consist of: reports on Steering Committee meetings for ICFY internal use; briefs delivered by the Co-Chairmen; memoranda regarding membership of the Committee; letters to the Co-Chairmen from representatives of foreign countries; and lists of delegates attending meetings. Also included are records relating to the Coordination Body for the Implementation of the Vance-Owen Peace Plan and the Arbitration Commission.

Other records concern working groups created by the ICFY, including: the Working Group on Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Working Group on Confidence and Security-Building and Verification Measures, the Economic Issues Working Group, the Working Group on Ethnic and National Communities and Minorities, the Humanitarian Issues Working Group, the Mostar Working Group, and the Working Group on Secession Issues. Meetings often were conducted at the ICFY Secretariat at the Palais de Nations in Geneva, Switzerland. Attendees included: representatives of United Nations agencies and Member States; ambassadors and government representatives; and delegations of former Yugoslav republics. Records of working groups consist of: programme agenda; lists of meeting attendees; discussion papers related to the meeting agenda; statements delivered by the Co-Chairmen and by meeting attendees; and summaries of meetings and periodic reports on the activities of working groups.

S-1835 also contains summaries of Co-Chairmen’s meetings held in Geneva with representatives of governments of the former Yugoslavia. Additionally, there are summaries of meetings that took place during the Co-Chairmen’s visits to the former Yugoslavia to meet with political leaders. Also included in S-1835 are the personal subject files of Co-Chairman Cyrus R. Vance and Deputy Co-Chairman Herbert S. Okun.

Also included in S-1835 are records pertaining to the development of peace agreements, constitutional agreements, ceasefire agreements, and economic agreements brokered by the ICFY. Among these are: the Invincible Plan of July and August 1993; constitutional agreement for Bosnia and Herzegovina, dating from 1993 and 1994; the Washington Agreement of 1994; the Economic Agreement of 2 December 1994; the Agreement on the Krajina, Slavonia, Southern Baranja and Western Sirmium of 1994 and 1995; and the Dayton Agreement of 1995. Records include: draft and final agreements; briefs and outlines for proposed changes to agreements; hand-marked maps depicting areas in the former Yugoslavia; and correspondence about the agreements.

In addition, there are files pertaining to countries in the former Yugoslavia. These primarily hold code cables exchanged between: the Co-Chairmen; the Special Representative of the Secretary-General (SRSG); and Kofi Annan, the Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations at United Nations headquarters in New York. Also included in country files are internal documents produced by the ICFY Co-Chairmen and their advisors, such as: talking points; working papers; draft agreements; and briefs on political and military developments in regions. Additionally, there are letters between the Special Representative of the Secretary-General (SRSG) and government representatives, including: the President of the Republic of Serbia Slobodan Miloševic; the President of Republika Srpska, Dr. Radovan Karadžic; the President of Bosnia and Herzegovina Alija Izetbegovic; the President of the Croatian Republic of Herceg-Bosna, Mate Boban; and the leader of the Autonomous Province of Western Bosnia, Fikret Abdic.

Additionally, S-1835 contains: draft reports prepared by the Co-Chairmen on the activities of the ICFY and submitted to the Security Council; summaries of meetings between United Nations officials and representatives of UNPROFOR, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), and the North Atlantic Council (NAC); briefs written by the Co-Chairmen and sent to the SRSG on developments in the peace process with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO); periodic reports on the activities of the ICFY’s Mission to the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY) undertaken in 1995 and 1996; memoranda prepared by the Legal Advisor to the ICFY about matters concerning the administration of Mostar and Sarajevo in Bosnia and Herzegovina by the European Union and the United Nations; briefs on the implementation of sanctions against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY), authored by the Co-Chairmen and sent to the Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations; periodic situation reports issued by the Sanctions Assistance Missions Communication Centre (SAMCOMM) of the European Union’s European Commission; press statements issued by the Co-Chairmen of the ICFY; and petitions and appeals urging cessation of conflict in the region, sent to the ICFY from non-governmental organizations and individuals.

Political Affairs
S-1036 · Série organique · 1990 - 1999
Fait partie de United Nations Observer Mission in Angola (MONUA) (1997-1999)

S-1036 contains records concerning political activities of the following peacekeeping missions:

United Nations Angola Verification Mission II (UNAVEM II), 30 May 1991 – 8 February 1995
United Nations Angola Verification Mission III (UNAVEM III), 8 February 1995 – 30 June 1997
United Nations Observer Mission in Angola (MONUA), 30 June 1997 – 26 February 1999

The MONUA peacekeeping mission maintained the files of two of its predecessor missions - UNAVEM II and UNAVEM III - and added records to those files until mission closure. Files for predecessor missions are searchable in S-1036 by date.

Special Representative of the Secretary-General (SRSG) / UNAVEM III and MONUA
Code cables include: summaries of the SRSG’s meetings with the president of the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA) Dr. Jonas Savimbi, and the President of the Government of Angola, Jose Eduardo dos Santos; summaries of meetings of the Troika of observer states represented on the Joint Commission; documents outlining the special status of Dr. Jonas Savimbi, as provided by the Lusaka Protocol; summaries of agreements between the Government of Angola and UNITA Renovada, a militant group that separated from UNITA in 1998; progress reports on search and rescue operations of the air accidents of 26 December 1998 and 2 January 1999; and records concerning the relocation of the Andulo and Bailundo Team Sites.

Other files include the SRSG’s correspondence with: United Nations headquarters and the president of the Security Council; governments of African states; embassies located in Luanda; and human rights, humanitarian, non-governmental, business, and religious organizations in Angola and abroad. Included are speeches by the SRSG, President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, and Dr. Jonas Savimbi, made for various events, including: the signing ceremony of the Lusaka Protocol held in Zambia in November 1994; and the investiture of the Government of National Unity and Reconciliation (GURN) in 1997.

Files on the Government of Unity and National Reconciliation (GURN) include: correspondence between the SRSG and the Minister of Territorial Administration of the Government of Angola; protest notes; and summaries of meetings of the Committee on the Extension of State Administration. Also included are statements made by President Jose Eduardo dos Santos and statements made by UNITA on the programme of the GURN.

Records pertaining to UNITA consist of: correspondence between the SRSG and Dr. Jonas Savimbi, as well as other UNITA officials; communiqués from UNITA sent to United Nations headquarters via the SRSG; manifestos of UNITA militants; papers describing violations of the Lusaka Protocol; and allegations made by UNITA against the Angolan National Police (ANP).

Special Representative of the Secretary-General (SRSG) / UNAVEM II
Records of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General (SRSG) include: reports from the SRSG to United Nations headquarters on political developments; records concerning the public information programme initiated in support of United Nations activities in Angola; summaries of meetings between the SRSG and representatives of United Nations agencies on mission activities; talking points for meetings between the SRSG and Dr. Jonas Savimbi, and between the SRSG and President Jose Eduardo dos Santos; and summaries of meetings between President Jose Eduardo dos Santos and Dr. Jonas Savimbi. Records concerning the national election of 29-30 September 1992 include: reports on the registration of voters in regions; reports concerning the airlift operations engaged to expedite the electoral process; and statements by the SRSG on the electoral process.

Security Council files include: summaries of meetings of the Security Council Ad Hoc Commission to Angola; and statements on the Angola situation made by the president of the Security Council.

Incident reports from regions describe hostilities in the field, such as: mortar shelling, sporadic rifle and artillery shooting; aerial and grenade attacks; and hijackings of vehicles. Incident reports also provide information about the following: the locations of fighting and the launching of counter attacks; the capture of territory by fighting parties; the status of UNAVEM personnel and the safety of UNAVEM compounds; relations between UNITA generals and generals of the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA); and anti-UNAVEM sentiment.

Records pertaining to UNITA consist of: Dr. Jonas Savimbi’s messages to the people of Angola; a report describing violations identified by UNITA of the electoral law in the national election of 29-30 September 1992; and memoranda concerning the personal safety of UNITA leaders and the protection of the party’s facilities.

Senior Political Adviser (SPA) / MONUA, UNAVEM III
Notes and briefings from the Senior Political Adviser to the SRSG include: comments and background analyses; and talking points and aide memoire for the SRSG’s meetings and events.

Records pertaining to the visit of Secretary-General Kofi Annan to Angola in March 1997 include: speeches made to UNAVEM III staff, the Joint Commission and the people of Angola; and talking points for the Secretary-General’s audience with President Jose Eduardo dos Santos and Dr. Jonas Savimbi.

Records concerning the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA) document: allegations made by UNITA to the Joint Commission against the Angolan National Police (ANP); arbitrary acts and violations of the Lusaka Protocol carried out by the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) as identified by UNITA; and UNITA’s surrendering of weapons and ammunition at MONUA team sites.

The Senior Political Adviser’s dossier on Angola includes: analyses on the activities of political parties; talking points and summaries of meetings between the SRSG and representatives of political parties; statements on the peace process made by political parties; and requests made by non-governmental organizations for audience with the Senior Political Adviser.

Division of Political Affairs / UNAVEM II, UNAVEM III and MONUA
Records of the Division of Political Affairs contain the proceedings of the Angola peace talks held in Lusaka, Zambia, from November 1993 to January 1994. Also included are: briefings from the Director of the Political Affairs Division to the SRSG; summaries of consultations between the SRSG and the Troika of observer states of the Angolan peace process; summaries of consultations between the SRSG and Dr. Jonas Savimbi; summaries of meetings in Andulo between UNITA officials and representatives of the Government of Angola; documents summarizing UNITA’s viewpoint on the formation of the Government of National Unity and Reconciliation (GURN); discussion papers on mitigating the impact of armed conflict on children; documents describing the humanitarian situation in Angola; and synthesis reports sent to the SRSG from Political Affairs Officers, who were charged with monitoring political developments in assigned areas.

Political analyses sent from the Director of the Division of Political Affairs to the SRSG concern a variety of topics, including: the transformation of Radio VORGAN into a non-partisan radio station as required by the Lusaka Protocol; and the activities of the National Liberation Front of Angola (FNLA) and other opposition parties in the parliament. Also include are: summaries of meetings, seminars and workshops held between Political Affairs Officers and political parties; summaries of press conferences held by political parties; and summaries of meetings between the SRSG and representatives of political parties.

Records concerning demobilization and the reintegration of combatants include: reintegration proposals; inventories of weapons and war materials handed over by UNITA; policy guidelines on the closure of quartering areas; and meetings minutes of the Joint Commission’s Technical Working Group on Demobilization and Reintegration.

Division of Political Affairs, Deputy Director / UNAVEM II, UNAVEM III and MONUA
Records of the Deputy Director of the Division of Political Affairs include: code cables, reading files, reports from regions, and weekly reports.

Code cables include: summaries of meetings between the SRSG and Dr. Jonas Savimbi in Andulo; implementation timetables on the extension of state administration; papers concerning the establishment of UNITA Renovada.

Reading files consist of: note verbale, information circulars, and internal memoranda of the Division of Political Affairs. Additionally, they contain: summaries of the SRSG’s meetings with the Diplomatic Corps; analyses of political developments; analyses of press coverage of mission activities; records pertaining to the visit of the Special Envoy of the Secretary-General to Angola, Lakhdar Brahimi, in August 1998; summaries of meetings between the SRSG and representatives of non-governmental organizations; briefs on the implantation of sanctions against Angola; plans and updates on the extension of state administration; and political analyses of news reports and press releases of Radio VORGAN (Voz Resistencia do Galo Negro).

Reports from regions consist of: daily and weekly political reports sent to the Director of the Division of Political Affairs from Regional Political Affairs Officers in the field; summaries of complaints sent to the SRSG from UNITA; summaries and minutes of Provincial Inter-Sectorial Group (GOIP) meetings; documents pertaining to the establishment of Radio Despertar, which replaced Radio VORGAN. Reports from regions concern: attacks on villages; the arbitrary harassment and arrest of civilians; the forced conscription of young men into the Angolan National Police (ANP), the Angolan Armed Forces (FAA), and UNITA; humanitarian assistance provided to internally displaced persons (IDP); land mine incidents; the relocation of threatened mission Team Sites to safer areas; and the development of cattle stealing as a political weapon.

Joint Commission Secretariat / UNAVEM II, UNAVEM III and MONUA
Records of the Joint Commission Secretariat consist of: minutes of ordinary and extraordinary sessions; implementation timetables for Security Council resolutions; briefs and reports prepared by the Force Commander for the Joint Commission; and reports prepared by the Ad Hoc Group to Review Allegations of Human Rights Violations to the Joint Commission.

Elections
S-1870 · Série organique · 1990 - 2000
Fait partie de United Nations Political and Peacekeeping Missions in Haiti (1993-2001)

United Nations Mission in Haiti (UNMIH)
In accordance with its mandate, UNMIH worked to establish an environment conducive to the organization of free and fair elections in Haiti. The municipal and parliamentary elections took place on 25 June 1995 and the presidential election took place on 17 December 1995. UNMIH worked closely with the Electoral Observation Mission (EOM) of the Organization of American States (OAS), which was deployed in mid-May 1995. The United Nations Electoral Assistance Team (EAT) was established in late 1994 to provide technical assistance to the elections at both the national and departmental levels. By late 1995, the EAT came under the operational responsibility of UNMIH. The records of UNMIH in S-1870 document the work of the EAT.

The records include memoranda prepared by the Coordinator of the Electoral Assistance Team (EAT) and other EAT staff for the Director and staff of the Electoral Assistance Division (EAD) at DPKO. The memoranda cover topics such as: electoral law, the timing of electoral operations, registration, and the design and counting of ballots. In addition, some memoranda concern coordination with Haiti’s Provincial Electoral Council (CEP), the autonomous national authority constitutionally charged with organizing and supervising the elections; these memoranda detail plans for electoral data processing and staffing.

Other records that relate to the CEP include: the Letter of Agreement between UNMIH and the CEP, electoral bulletins from the CEP’s press service, EAT notes for the file about the establishment of a communications system for the CEP, calendars detailing electoral set-up activities, and minutes of EAT meetings with representatives of the CEP. The minutes, as well as minutes of EAT meetings with NGOs, OAS, and governmental and United Nations agencies, concern collaboration on the electoral process. Specific topics include: elections results, electoral observation, incidents of violation of electoral law, the production of civic education materials, the vote counting process, and ink for marking votes.

In addition, there are records relating to Haiti’s Bureau Electoral Départemental (BED), Bureau Electoral Communal (BEC), Bureau d’Inscription et de Vote (BIV), and Assemblies of Communal Sections (ASECs). These records consist of lists of registration sites and checklists of election tasks to be executed by BEDs and BECs, such as personnel deployment, evaluation of communications, and transport of elections materials.

The files also contain periodic reports authored by the USAID Advisor, weekly executive summaries, field trip reports, and after-action reviews of the elections. The periodic reports authored by the USAID Advisor detail political developments such as changes in CEP personnel, as well as meetings between representatives of the Haitian government, NGOs, OAS, and governmental and United Nations agencies.

The weekly executive summaries were prepared by Lakhdar Brahimi, the UNMIH Special Representative of the Secretary-General (SRSG) for the Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Kofi Annan. The summaries cover a variety of topics, including: elections results, political parties boycotting the elections, speeches made by President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the expulsion of Haitians from the Dominican Republic, Haitian government legislation on the minimum wage, arrests and trials of notorious criminals, justice and prison system reforms, police training and misconduct, economic and humanitarian aid developments, and threats against UNMIH.

Field trip reports were prepared by the EAT’s Senior Logistics Officer. They detail the Senior Logistics Officer’s meetings with EAT staff, BED presidents, and MICIVIH representatives, and contain the Officer’s evaluation of communications, equipment, and roads in the departments with respect to the conduct of elections.

Records relating to the International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES), a non-governmental organization, concern the procurement of polling materials and training of elections officials, registrars, and poll-workers. They include project proposals, working papers, calendars of electoral tasks, training and civic education material, and memoranda exchanged between members of the IFES, EAT, CEP, and USAID.

Other records consist of copies of electoral law from the newspaper “Le Moniteur”, departmental results for the 1995 elections, security briefs, and civic education material distributed by UNMIH’s Military Information Support Task Force (MIST).

International Civilian Mission in Haiti, OAS/UN (MICIVIH)
In November 1994, after MICIVIH returned to Haiti following the restoration of the Haitian government, the Organization of American States (OAS) and the United Nations tasked MICIVIH observers with monitoring: the human rights aspects of the electoral process, particularly the right to vote, and the rights of expression, association and assembly; and acts of intimidation and violence during the electoral campaigns. MICIVIH Observers worked closely with OAS-EOM observers.

Records prepared by MICIVIH Observers include: overviews of the political and electoral climate in the department; reports of field visits to oversee electoral operations, noting visits to political party offices and the conduct of political party gatherings; lists of candidates and their respective political parties; and statistics for various aspects of the electoral process, such as the number of registered voters. Additionally, there are periodic reports prepared by the OAS-EOM.

The summaries of Observers’ visits to local offices of Haiti’s Bureau Electoral Départemental (BED) and the Bureau Electoral Communal (BEC) detail: technical operations of setting up voting sites; voter education programs in communes; the voter registration process; the status of candidates; the distribution and collection of electoral material; security presence at voting sites; the validity of voting results; and election results.

Also included are Observers’ memoranda about a variety of subjects, including: the electoral and security climate; irregularities and obstructions to the electoral process; poor administrative practices related to the elections, such as incorrectly sealing voting boxes and violations of privacy during the act of voting; fraudulent voter registration, voting, and vote counting; anti-UN and anti-government sentiment; control of crowds at voting sites; controversies surrounding local election outcomes; political manoeuvring and suspected impartiality within Haitian electoral institutions; and public demonstrations related to elections.

The memoranda also cover politically-motivated election violence, such as: arson; attacks against candidates; threats received by BEC and BIV officials; ransacking of Bureaux d'Inscriptions et de Votes (BIV); destruction of ballot boxes; and assassinations and deaths resulting from suspicious circumstances. They also note the arrests of individuals accused of political intimidation and disruptions to the electoral process.

The records are arranged geographically by base.

Security Planning Unit
S-0957 · Série organique · 1990 - 1994
Fait partie de United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) (1992-1993)

The Security Planning Unit was an office under UNTAC's Integrated Support Services, Division of Administration. Its primary function was to implement security and evacuation plans for UNTAC at the mission and provincial levels.

Series consists of records in the following order: security and/or evacuation plans for various regions and agencies; correspondence with UN agencies, NGOs, and UN Headquarters; records related to security incidents; records related to security coordination with the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces (RCAF); end of mission reports; records related to UNTAC withdrawal; UNTAC Property Survey Board cases; additional security & evacuation plans; annotated Phnom Penh maps; records related to the deployment of international polling station officers (IPSOs); and a sketch of Angkor Chum UNTAC compound.

Includes 2 maps, 1 drawing, and 1.79 MB of textual records and other material.

Contains cryptofaxes.

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Regional Police Offices
S-1812 · Série organique · 1990 - 1995
Fait partie de United Nations Observer Mission in El Salvador (ONUSAL) (1991-1995)

S-1812 contains records concerning the operation of the Police Division of the United Nations Observer Mission in El Salvador (ONUSAL), and of ONUSAL’s reform and development of Salvadoran police forces.

Police Division
Included are records relating to the support and training ONUSAL provided to the National Civil Police (PNC). Training materials consist of manuals, memoranda and correspondence concerning security for government officials and foreign dignitaries, public security, explosives identification and destruction, patrol, and transport. Also included are records relating to the organization of the Mission, the restructuring of the Police Division, and the Mission mandate.

Regional Police Office of Chalatenango
Records consist of daily reports concerning the results of investigations, arrests and detentions, theft, assault, homicide, and disappearances; and operation logs of the Auxiliary Transitory Police (PAT). The PAT was responsible for maintaining public order and security in the former zones of conflict until their substitution by the new National Civil Police (PNC).

Officers’ files consist of monitoring, investigation, and analyses reports sent to the Head of the Regional Police Office of Chalatenango. These reports contain information on: the verification of explosive ordinance, demonstrations, armed groups, and gunfire. Officers’ files also contain: security and evacuation plans instituted during the elections held in March 1994; and papers and memoranda regarding the voter registration process and the issuance of voter ID cards (carnets).

Reports submitted to the Head of the Police Division cover such topics as: arms trafficking; the discovery of explosives and tatús (guerilla tunnels and shelters); acts of vigilantism; crimes and human rights violations; misconduct by members of the PNC and the PAT; assistance and training provided to the PNC; and security for the elections and for the Head of Mission’s visit to the region.

Regional Police Office of San Miguel
Records consist of: reports about corrupt officers in the National Police (PN); complaints of misconduct by members of the Auxiliary Transitory Police (PAT); incident and patrol reports; reports on receptions for mayors (alcaldes) returning from exile; and summaries of telephone calls. There is also correspondence from ONUSAL police sub-offices in the following locations: San Luis de la Reina in the department of San Miguel; Osicala and Sociedad in the department of Morazan; and Anamoros and Santa Rosa de Lima in the department of La Union.

Also included are: case information sheets for human rights violations followed by the Regional Police Office of San Miguel; papers about the establishment and deployment of the National Police (PN) in the department of San Miguel; analyses of public security in municipalities of San Miguel; graphs and statistics on crime in the department of San Miguel; and plans to reduce crime drafted by the National Police.

Regional Police Office of San Miguel, Sub-Office of San Francisco Gotera
Records consist of: correspondence with the Regional Office of San Miguel; Police Observers’ reports on local incidents; accusations of human rights violations committed by members of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN); reports on the distribution of housewares and farming tools to former members of the FMLN; memoranda on underage members of the FMLN; reports on the performance and operational difficulties of the Sub-Office of San Francisco Gotera, which was located in the department of Morazan; and summaries and minutes of meeting of the sub-office staff.

Regional Police Office of San Miguel, Sub-Office of Santa Rosa de Lima
Included are operation logs and reports sent to the Regional Police Office of San Miguel about criminal investigations. The reports also concern: the corruption of judges; disputes about land ownership and land transactions; destruction of weapons; induction of new members of the National Civil Police (PNC); and troop movements of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN).

Regional Police Office of San Salvador
Records consist of daily reports prepared by the head of the Regional Police Office of San Salvador about patrols carried out in numerous municipalities and towns in the department of San Salvador. The reports contain information about: interviews conducted in connection with crimes being investigated; visits to National Police headquarters; monitoring of labor protests; and visits with mayors (alcaldes).

Regional Police Office of San Salvador, Sub-Office of Suchitoto
Included are: patrol reports submitted from the Sub-Office of Suchitoto, which was located in the department of Cuscatlan, to the regional police offices of San Salvador and San Vicente about incidents in the municipalities of Cuscatlan.

Also included are: proceedings from meetings held about the transaction of properties in the Land Transfer and Reintegration Program (PTT); and reports on visits to properties to investigate land-related complaints and incidents arising from the administration of the PTT.

Regional Police Office of Santa Ana
Included are reports on human rights violations, prison visits, crimes, disappearances, labor disputes, and land disputes. Also included are verification reports about local branches of the Customs Police and the National Police.

Regional Police Office of Usulutan
Included are reports on a variety of topics, such as: criminal investigations, armed groups, corruption; and the state of public security in towns and municipalities in the department of Usulutan. Also included are records of the Auxiliary Transitory Police (PAT) stationed in Jucuaran, San Augustin and Santa Elena, which consist of: patrol and incident reports, incident scene sketches; and correspondence from justices of the peace.

Correspondence covers such topics as: crimes; human rights violations; incidents; exhumations of corpses; penal code reform; land ownership disputes; the organization of the Police Division; cooperation between the Police Division and the Human Rights Division; and assistance provided to the Salvadoran government’s vaccination campaign.