The Hamilton Spectator

The Iconoclast of Timbuktu

Progressiv­e conviction for cultural terror

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Nobody got punished for blowing up the giant Buddhist statues in Afghanista­n’s Bamiyan Valley in 2001. Nobody has been sent to jail for blowing up much of the ancient city of Palmyra in Syria after ISIL captured it in May 2015. (It was recaptured last March.) But Ahmed al-Mahdi is going to jail for a long time for destroying the religious monuments of Timbuktu, and he even says he’s sorry.

Appearing before the Internatio­nal Criminal Court in The Hague on Monday, the former junior civil servant in Mali’s department of education said “All the charges brought against me are accurate and correct. I am really sorry, and I regret all the damage that my actions have caused.”

He caused a lot of damage. Timbuktu is a remote desert outpost now, with fewer residents than the 25,000 students who thronged its famous Islamic university in its golden age in the 16th century. Its ancient mosques and monuments are of such historical value that they have earned Timbuktu a UNESCO designatio­n as a World Heritage Site.

Timbuktu’s greatest treasure was its tens of thousands of manuscript­s dating from the 12th to the 16th centuries.

When Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) stormed into Timbuktu in 2012, the heroic librarian Abdel Kader Haidara saved 95 per cent of the city’s manuscript­s by smuggling them out to Bamako, Mali’s capital. But the mosques and the mausoleums could not be moved, and Ahmed al-Mahdi was recruited to head the “morality police.” One of his jobs was smashing the ones that were “idolatrous.” To protect people from sin, historic buildings, tombs, etc. must be destroyed.

AQIM, like ISIL and the Taliban, is “Salafi” in its beliefs, but Salafism is essentiall­y an offspring of Wahhabism with added extremism. So Ahmed al-Mahdi was an obvious recruit for AQIM, and he threw himself into his new job with enthusiasm. He is charged with destroying nine mausoleums and part of one mosque, but he almost certainly vandalized many more.

Malian and French troops drove AQIM out of Timbuktu in 2013, and al-Mahdi was captured shortly afterwards. As head of the morality police he supervised the whipping of smokers, drinkers and “impure” women, the stoning of adulterers, and the execution of “apostates” — but the charge that the Internatio­nal Criminal Court chose to bring against him was “destroying cultural heritage.”

This is a first for the ICC, the world’s permanent war crimes court. Its previous cases have all involved illegal violence against people. This case is about violence against things.

Some critics worry that expanding the category of war crimes in this way undermines the unique status of torture, murder and genocide as crimes so terrible that they require internatio­nal action if local courts cannot deal with them. Mali requested that the case against al-Mahdi be transferre­d to the ICC.

It’s a very old crime. Gangs of Christian monks hacked the noses off every “pagan” statue they could find in 4th-century Egypt. Catholic missionari­es in 16th century Mexico supervised the burning of thousands of illustrate­d books containing the history and mythology of the pre-Columbian civilizati­ons.

So is the ICC of today just picking on Muslims?

No. Genocide was only defined and made illegal by the Nuremburg trials in 1945-46, although history is full of other genocides. But the world was not picking on Germans. We had just reached a point in our history when we could finally agree that genocide was always and everywhere a crime against humanity.

Making the act of deliberate­ly “destroying cultural heritage” a crime is another, lesser step in the same process of building a body of internatio­nal human rights law that applies to everybody. Al-Mahdi just happened to come along at what was, for him, the wrong time.

Gwynne Dyer is an independen­t journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.

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GWYNNE DYER

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