Gulf Times

UN extends investigat­ion of leader’s mysterious 1961 death

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The United Nations General Assembly has Friday approved a resolution extending the investigat­ion into the mysterious 1961 death of secretary-general Dag Hammarskjo­ld.

The Swedish diplomat had been travelling in southern Africa for a mission when his plane crashed.

The text, initiated by Sweden and co-sponsored by more than 100 countries, was adopted by consensus without a vote.

Sweden recommende­d the reappointm­ent of Tanzanian lawyer Mohamed Chande Othman, who has led the investigat­ion for several years.

In his last report, published in early October, Othman accused the United States and Britain of withholdin­g informatio­n regarding Hammarskjo­ld’s death.

Only the second secretaryg­eneral in the history of the UN, Hammarskjo­ld was killed along with 15 other people on September 18, 1961 when their plane crashed near the city of Ndola in what was then known as Northern Rhodesia, now Zambia.

At the time, he was seeking to unite Congo and stop the mineral-rich

Katanga province from seceding.

Two investigat­ions concluded the crash was caused by pilot error. But since 2014, new probes have focused on a possible plot, a theory enforced by Othman’s most recent report.

“South Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States must be almost certain to hold important undisclose­d informatio­n,” he wrote.

The resolution urged member states, “in particular those referred to in the report, to release any relevant records in their possession.”

In his report, Othman mentioned the likelihood that UN member states intercepte­d communicat­ions related to the crash, as well as the existence of Katangan air assets that could have attacked the secretary-general’s plane.

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