The resolution noted remaining challenges in completing the reintegration and repatriation of ex-combatants, and the re-structuring of the security sector. Meanwhile, UNMIL had deployed in border areas and there was a need for continued support for the Special Court for Sierra Leone.
Meanwhile, the Secretary-GeneralKofi Annan's intention to gradually withdraw UNMIL's troop contingent was supported.[2] He was asked to keep the Council updated on the restructuring of the security sector, the reintegration of former combatants, political and ethnic reconciliation, the consolidation of state authority throughout Liberia, judicial reform, government control over the country's natural resources, and the establishment of a stable and secure environment for economic growth.[3] In this context, the Liberian government was required to take steps to achieve benchmarks in the key aforementioned areas.
^"UN extends peacekeeping mandate in Liberia". STAR radio. 2 October 2006.
^Institute for Security Studies (South Africa) (2008). Lessons from Liberia: integrated approaches to peacebuilding in transitional settings. Institute for Security Studies. p. 5.