MINURSO is the only UN peacekeeping mission established since 1978 to be operating without the capacity to monitor human rights. Although Resolution 1979 of the UN Security Council recommends the establishment of one, this has not yet happened. 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 chairman
Frank Ruddy to deliver a strong attack on the organization; he has since kept up his critique of what he argues is an economically costly and politically corrupt process. Growing criticism has been voiced against the UN Security Council for not establishing a program of
human 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, despite serious reports of numerous abuses. This possibility has been denied by France with its
veto power on the
Security Council. In April 2016,
Uruguay and
Venezuela 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 which
Russia and two other powers abstained. Over a two-year period, mostly 2006–2007, MINURSO personnel vandalized archaeological sites by spraying
graffiti over prehistoric rock paintings and engravings in the
Free 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. In May 2010, the Polisario Front suspended contacts with the MINURSO, because of the failure to implement 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". ==See also==