AHG/Res. 34 (II)
APARTHEID AND RACIAL DISCRIMINATION
IN THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
The Assembly of Heads of State and government meeting in it Second Ordinary
Session in Accra, Ghana, from 21 to 25 October 1965,
Recalling the resolution adopted on 25 May 1963 by the Assembly of Heads of
State and Government resolutions AHG/Res.5(I) and AHG/Res.6(I) of July 1964, as well
as resolution CM/Res. 48(IV) of March 1965, on the problem of apartheid and racial
discrimination,
Considering the report of the Ministers for Foreign Affairs of Liberia,
Madagascar, Sierra Leone and Tunisia, who had been requested by the Conference of
Heads of State and Government in Addis Ababa in May 1963 to speak on behalf of all
African States at the meetings of the Security Council held to discuss the question of
apartheid and racial discrimination in the Republic of South Africa, and whose
mandate was extended by the Assembly of Heads of State and Government meeting in
its First Ordinary Session in Cairo in July 1964,
Taking note of the reports of the United Nations Special Committee on the
Policies of apartheid of the Government of the Republic of South Africa (United Nations
documents A/5932 and A/5957),
Noting the measures taken by other states in implementation of the resolutions of
the Untied Nations and of the Organization of African Unity in order to bring about the
abandonment of the policy of apartheid,
Considering that the situation in the Republic of South Africa is constantly
deteriorating and constitutes an ever-increasing threat to international peace and
security,
Gravely concerned at the increasing collaboration of the South African
Government with the Government of Portugal as well as with the minority authorities
in Southern Rhodesia to prevent the liberation of Southern Africa from colonialism and
racism,