United Nations Security Council Resolution 1406

UN Security Council
Resolution 1406
Date: 30 April 2002
Meeting no.: 4,523
Code: S/RES/1406 (Document)

Vote: For: 15 Abs.: 0 Against: 0
Subject: The situation concerning Western Sahara
Result: Adopted

Security Council composition in 2002:
permanent members:

 CHN  FRA  RUS  UK  USA

non-permanent members:
 BUL  CMR  COL  GUI  IRL
 MEX  MRI  NOR  SIN  SYR

Western Sahara

United Nations Security Council Resolution 1406, adopted unanimously on April 30, 2002, after recalling all previous resolutionns on the situation on Western Sahara, particularly Resolution 1394 (2002), the Council extended the mandate of the United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO) until July 31, 2002.[1]

MINURSO's mandate was extended to allow for more time for the Council to consider the Secretary-General Kofi Annan's 'four options' concerning the future of Western Sahara, described in his report.[2] The four options were:[1]

  1. The resumption of the implementation of the Settlement Plan without requiring agreements from both Morocco and the Polisario Front. Under this option, the MINURSO Identification Commission for voters would be reinforced and overall MINURSO operation size increased;
  2. The Secretary-General's Personal Envoy James A. Baker III would revise the framework agreement which would be presented to the parties on a non-negotiable basis. This would involve a devolution of authority to the population of Western Sahara with a referendum taking place on self-determination and the size of MINURSO would be reduced;
  3. The Secretary-General's Personal Envoy James A. Baker III would determine if the parties would discuss a division of Western Sahara territory. Baker would present his proposal for a division of the territory and MINURSO would be maintained at its current size;
  4. The termination of the MINURSO operation which would be an acknowledgement that the United Nations was unable to solve the dispute unless one or both parties were required to do something they would not voluntarily agree to.

The Moroccan government rejected all the proposals except the second, while the Polisario Front argued that the Settlement Plan was the only acceptable solution.[3]

See also

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