Once again the UN cover themselves with glory:

Spectacular prehistoric depictions of animal and human figures created up to 6,000 years ago on Western Saharan rocks have been vandalised by United Nations peacekeepers, The Times has learnt.

Archaeological sites boasting ancient paintings and engravings of giraffes, buffalo and elephants have been defaced within the past two years by personnel attached to the UN mission, known by its French acronym, Minurso.

Graffiti, some of it more than a metre high and sprayed with paint meant for use for marking routes, now blights the rock art at Lajuad, an isolated site known as Devil Mountain, which is regarded by the local Sahrawi population as a mystical place of great cultural significance.

Many of the UN “graffiti artists” signed and dated their work, revealing their identities and where they are from. Minurso personnel stationed in Western Sahara come from almost 30 countries. They are monitoring a ceasefire between the occupying Moroccan forces and the Polisario Front, which is seeking independence.

One Croatian peacekeeper scrawled “Petar CroArmy” across a rock face. Extensive traces of pigment from rock painting are visible underneath. Another left behind Cyrillic graffiti, and “Evgeny” from Russia scribbled AUI, the code for the Minurso base at Aguanit. “Mahmoud” from Egypt left his mark at Rekeiz Lemgasem, and “Ibrahim” wrote his name and number over a prehistoric painting of a giraffe. “Issa”, a Kenyan major who signed his name and wrote the date, had just completed a UN course, Ethics in Peacekeeping, documents show.

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2 responses to “Ethics in Peacekeeping”

  1. Dom Avatar
    Dom

    Well, I have to ask. Why does this bother you, but not the “vital” graffiti you mentioned below? I realize there is a big difference between abandoned property and archaeological sites, but they are still defacing property that isn’t theirs. The UN Peacekeepers are vandals and so are all graffitti “artists”.
    Okay, won’t bring it up again.

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  2. SnoopyTheGoon Avatar

    Look at it in the optimistic way: in 6,000 years the archaeologists (most probably alien) will bust their humps (tails, whatever), trying to figure out these (trivial today) rock records. Imagine the theories running wild!

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