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United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
United Nations peacekeeping mission in Western Sahara
United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara
Location ofWestern Sahara in North Africa
AbbreviationMINURSO
Formation24 April 1991
TypePeacekeeping Mission
Legal statusActive
HeadquartersLaayoune,Western Sahara
Head
Alexander Ivanko (Russia), Special Representative
Force Commander
Major GeneralFakhrul Ahsan
Parent organization
United Nations Security Council
Websiteminurso.unmissions.org
Part of a series on the
Western Sahara conflict
Background
Regions
Politics
Clashes
Issues
Peace process
Left a car of MINURSO, right a post of the Frente polisario in 2017 in southern Western Sahara
MINURSO cars in Laayoune.

TheUnited Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (Arabic:بعثة الأمم المتحدة لتنظيم استفتاء في الصحراء الغربية;French:Mission des Nations Unies pour l'Organisation d'un Référendum au Sahara Occidental;Spanish:Misión de las Naciones Unidas para la Organización de un Referéndum en el Sáhara Occidental;MINURSO) is theUnited Nations peacekeeping mission inWestern Sahara, established in 1991 underUnited Nations Security Council Resolution 690[1] as part of theSettlement Plan, which had paved way for acease-fire in the conflict betweenMorocco and thePolisario Front (representing theSahrawi Arab Democratic Republic) over the contested territory of Western Sahara (formerlySpanish Sahara).

MINURSO's mission was to monitor the cease-fire and to organize and conduct areferendum in accordance with the Settlement Plan, which would enable theSahrawi people ofWestern Sahara to choose between integration with Morocco andindependence. This was intended to constitute a Sahrawi exercise ofself-determination, and thus complete Western Sahara's still-unfinished process ofdecolonization (Western Sahara is the last major territory remaining on the UN'slist of non-decolonized territories.)

Mandate

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According to the United Nations, MINURSO was "originally mandated in accordance with the settlement plan to:

  • monitor the ceasefire;
  • verify the reduction of Moroccan troops in the Territory;
  • monitor the confinement of Moroccan and Frente Polisario troops to designated locations;
  • take steps with the parties to ensure the release of all Western Saharan political prisoners or detainees;
  • oversee the exchange of prisoners of war, to be implemented byInternational Committee of the Red Cross, (ICRC);
  • repatriate the refugees of Western Sahara, a task to be carried out by theUnited Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR);
  • identify and register qualified voters;
  • organise and ensure a free and fair referendum and proclaim the results;
  • reduce the threat of unexploded ordnances and mines."[2]

Plans

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The independence referendum was originally scheduled for 1992, but conflicts over voter eligibility prevented it from being held. Both sides blamed each other for stalling the process. In 1997, theHouston Agreement was supposed to restart the process, but again failed. In 2003, theBaker Plan was launched to replace the Settlement Plan, but while accepted by the Polisario and unanimously endorsed by theUnited Nations Security Council, it was rejected by Morocco. Morocco insisted that all inhabitants of the territory should be eligible to vote in the referendum. Following the 1975Green March, the Moroccan state has sponsoredsettlement schemes[3] enticing thousands of Moroccans to move intothe Moroccan-occupied part of Western Sahara (80% of the territory). By 2015, it was estimated that Moroccan settlers made up at least two thirds of the500,000 inhabitants.[4]

Presently, there is no plan for holding the referendum, and the viability of the cease-fire is coming into question.

Extensions

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The MINURSO mandate has been extended 47 times since 1991.[5] In October 2006 the Security Council passed a resolution extending the mandate of MINURSO to April 2007.[6] A provision decryinghuman rights abuses by Morocco in Western Sahara had the backing of 14 members of the Security Council, but was deleted due to French objections.[7]

In April 2007 the resolution extending the mandate to October took "note of the Moroccan proposal presented on 11 April 2007 to the Secretary-General and welcoming serious and credible Moroccan efforts to move the process forward towards resolution" and also took "note of the Polisario Front proposal presented on 10 April 2007 to the Secretary-General".[8] The representative ofSouth Africa took exception to the way that one proposal was held more worthy than the other as well as the lack of participation outside theGroup of Friends in the drafting of the resolution.[9]

The October 2007 resolution extending the mandate to April 2008 contained the same preferential wording in its description of the two proposals.[10] The representative of South Africa commented on this again, and regretted the fact that the resolution "considered" rather than "welcomed" the report on the situation by the Secretary-General—"presumably because [it] dared to raise the issue of the human rights violations against the Saharawi people", and quoted the warning in the report[11] about there being no mandate to address the issue of human rights.[12]

The April 2008 resolution extended the mandate for a full year to April 2009.[13] Before the vote, the representative of Costa Rica expressed his "concern at the manner in which the draft resolution on which we are about to vote was negotiated" and a "difficulty in understanding the absolute refusal to include" references to human rights.[14] MINURSO's budget is roughly 60 million dollars per year.[15]

Bases

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There are two sets of teams, those in theMoroccan-controlled portion west of the berm and those in theSahrawi-controlled region andrefugee camps to the east and inAlgeria. The camps west of theberm are located inMahbes,Smara,Umm Dreiga andAuserd. The eastern camps includeBir Lehlou,Tifariti,Mehaires,Mijek, andAgwanit. There is also a liaison office inTindouf which serves as a communication channel with POLISARIO leadership.

Current composition

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As of 30 June 2018[update], MINURSO had a total of 220 uniformed personnel, including 19 contingent troops, 193 experts on mission, 7 staff officers, and 1 police officer,[16] supported by 227 civilian personnel, and 16 UN volunteers. Major troop contributors areBangladesh,Egypt, andPakistan. Armed contingents patrol theno man's land that borders theMoroccan Wall, to safeguard the cease-fire.

MINURSO headquarters inEl Aaiun,Western Sahara, June 2, 2012. Several Moroccan flags are displayed at the entrance of the compound, in contrast with MINURSO bases in thePOLISARIOLiberated Territories, where only the UN flag is displayed.

Other personnel:

StateContingent TroopsExperts on MissionStaff OfficersPoliceTotal
 Argentina03003
 Austria05005
 Bangladesh1980027
 Belgium07007
 Bhutan02002
 Brazil0100010
 China0120012
 Croatia07007
 Djibouti02002
 Dominican Republic00022
 Ecuador04004
 Egypt0190019
 El Salvador01001
 France02002
 Germany01001
 Ghana087015
 Guinea04004
 Honduras0120012
 Hungary06006
 India03003
 Indonesia03003
 Ireland03003
 Italy02002
 Japan02002
 Jordan02002
 Kazakhstan05005
 Malawi03003
 Malaysia05005
 Mexico04004
 Mongolia01001
 Nepal06006
 Nigeria06006
 Pakistan0110011
 Philippines02024
 Poland00101
 Portugal00011
 Russia0150015
 South Korea04004
 Sri Lanka04004
 Sweden02002
 Switzerland02002
 Togo02002
 United Nations1919371220

There have been a total of 16 fatalities in MINURSO: six military personnel, a police officer, a military observer, three international civilian personnel, and five local civilian personnel.[17]

Criticism

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MINURSO is the only UN peacekeeping mission established since 1978 to be operating without the capacity to monitor human rights.[18] Although Resolution 1979 of the UN Security Council recommends the establishment of one, this has not yet happened.[19] In 1995, MINURSO's inability or unwillingness to act against perceived Moroccan manipulation of the process, and abuse of Sahrawi civilians, caused its former deputy chairmanFrank Ruddy to deliver a strong attack on the organization;[20] he has since kept up his critique of what he argues is an economically costly and politically corrupt process.[21] Growing criticism has been voiced against the UN Security Council for not establishing a program ofhuman rights (as MINURSO is the only UN mission in the world who has no mandate on them) monitoring for Western Sahara and the Sahrawi population,[22] despite serious reports of numerous abuses.[23] This possibility has been denied by France with itsveto power on theSecurity Council.[24] In April 2016,Uruguay andVenezuela expressed their dissatisfaction with this state of affairs by taking the rare step of voting against a Security Council Resolution reauthorizing MINURSO,United Nations Security Council Resolution 2285, from whichRussia and two other powers abstained.

Over a two-year period, mostly 2006–2007, MINURSO personnel vandalized archaeological sites by sprayinggraffiti over prehistoric rock paintings and engravings[25] in theFree Zone (POLISARIO-controlled parts of Western Sahara). There are also accusations of looting of prehistorical paintings by individuals from the UN on some of those sites.[26]

In May 2010, the Polisario Front suspended contacts with the MINURSO, because of the failure on implementing the self-determination referendum, and accused the force of "...turning into a protector shield of a colonial fact, the occupation of the Western Sahara by Morocco".[27]

See also

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References

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  1. ^United Nations Security Council Resolution 690. S/RES/690(1991) 29 April 1991. Retrieved accessdate.
  2. ^"MINURSO: Mandate". United Nations. 26 October 2016. Retrieved12 March 2021.
  3. ^Settlers in Contested Lands. Stanford University Press. 2015. p. 58.ISBN 978-0-8047-9652-1.
  4. ^Shefte, Whitney (6 January 2015)."Western Sahara's stranded refugees consider renewal of Morocco conflict".the Guardian. Retrieved2 April 2018.
  5. ^"Security Council Resolutions and Statements".MINURSO. 2016-10-26. Retrieved2020-08-05.
  6. ^United Nations Security Council Resolution 1720. S/RES/1720(2006) 31 October 2006. Retrieved accessdate.
  7. ^"UN shuns W. Sahara rights plea after France objects". Reuters Alertnet. Reuters. Retrieved2006-10-31.
  8. ^United Nations Security Council Resolution 1754. S/RES/1754(2007) 31 April 2007. Retrieved accessdate.
  9. ^United Nations Security Council Verbotim Report 5669. S/PV/5669 page 2. Mr. Kumalo South Africa 30 April 2007. Retrieved accessdate.
  10. ^United Nations Security Council Document 619. S/2007/619 (2007) Retrieved accessdate.
  11. ^United Nations Security Council Document 619. Report of the Secretary-General on the situation concerning Western Sahara S/2007/619 page 15. 19 October 2007. Retrieved accessdate.
  12. ^United Nations Security Council Verbotim Report 5773. S/PV/5773 page 2. Mr. Kumalo South Africa 31 October 2007. Retrieved accessdate.
  13. ^United Nations Security Council Resolution 1813. S/RES/1813(2008) (2008) Retrieved accessdate.
  14. ^United Nations Security Council Verbotim Report 5884. S/PV/5884 page 2. Mr. Urbina Costa Rica 30 April 2008. Retrieved accessdate.
  15. ^"Financial aspects".MINURSO Facts and Figures.
  16. ^"Troop and police contributors".United Nations Peacekeeping. Retrieved2018-07-19.
  17. ^"Fatalities".United Nations Peacekeeping. Retrieved2018-07-19.
  18. ^"Mission Mandate". Archived fromthe original on 2013-02-04. Retrieved2015-04-14.
  19. ^"United Nations Security Council Resolution 1979".Resolutions of the Security Council on MINURSO.
  20. ^Ruddy, Frank (1995-01-25)."Review of United Nations Operations & Peacekeeping". Washington, DC: Congress of the United States. Retrieved2009-02-26.
  21. ^Catherine, Edwards (1999-10-04)."Saharawi Republic Waits to Be Born". B Net. Archived fromthe original on 2007-10-05. Retrieved2009-02-26.
  22. ^Whitson, Sarah Leah (2009-04-17)."Letter to the UNSC urging for human rights monitoring in Western Sahara". Human Rights Watch. Retrieved2009-07-06.
  23. ^http://www.afapredesa.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=233&Itemid=2Archived 2018-12-15 at theWayback Machine Campaña internacional ampliación D.D.H.H. mandato MINURSO
  24. ^"Security Council under pressure over human rights in Western Sahara"Pravda, April 27, 2010
  25. ^"UN vandals spray graffiti on Sahara's prehistoric art".The Times. Archived fromthe original on 9 August 2011. RetrievedMay 8, 2008.
  26. ^"Cronaca: UN peacekeepers: Cultural crime, too". Archived fromthe original on July 8, 2011. RetrievedApril 7, 2010. UN peacekeepers: cultural crime, too.
  27. ^"El Polisario rompe los contactos con la MINURSO" (in Spanish).El País. 2010-05-28. Retrieved4 June 2010.

Further reading

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External links

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