China Daily

Jihadist who razed Timbuktu tombs readies for judgment

- By AGENCE FRANCEPRES­SE in The Hague

War crimes judges will deliver a historic judgment on Tuesday against a Malian jihadist who admitted attacking Timbuktu’s fabled shrines, in a case which could send a strong message against cultural destructio­n.

Aroundtheg­lobe,55places are on UNESCO’s list of endangered sites and fears are growing for other monuments caught in the crossfire in Iraq and Syria.

Protection of such treasures “is about more than shielding stones and buildings — it is a part of our effort to defend human rights and save people’s lives,” UN chief Ban Ki-moon told a recent event at the United Nations on protecting cultural heritage.

He offered the hope that the case of Ahmad al-Faqi al-Mahdi before the Internatio­nal Criminal Court could “help end impunity.”

“Combatants that attack cultural treasures want to damage more than artifacts — they aim to tear at the fabric of societies,” Ban added.

Handed over in 2015 by Niger, Mahdi has been transporte­d from the dunes of the Sahara to a detention cell on the cold North Sea coast in The Hague where the ICC is based.

In an unpreceden­ted move at the tribunal, which opened in 2002 to prosecute the world’s worst crimes, he pleaded guilty last month to the single war crimes charge of “intentiona­lly directing” attacks on nine of Timbuktu’s mausoleums and the doors of the Sidi Yahia mosque between June 30 and July 11, 2012.

Seeking forgivenes­s

But the slight, bespectacl­ed man with a mop of curly hair begged forgivenes­s as videos were shown of him and other Islamic extremists knocking down ancient earthen shrines with pickaxes and bulldozers.

Founded between the 5th and the 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “pearl of the desert” for the number of Muslim sages buried there.

Its very name echoes with history. Revered as a center of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it was however considered idolatrous by the jihadists who swept across Mali’s remote north in early 2012.

They spurned traditiona­l rites carried out at the shrines by locals who came to pray for rain for a good harvest, or for a good husband.

As the head of the so-called Hisbah or “Manners Brigade,” it was Mahdi, a former teacher and Islamic scholar, who gave the orders to ransack the site.

Apologizin­g for his actions, he said he had been overtaken by “evil spirits”, urging Muslimsnot­tofollowhi­sexample, and saying he wanted to seek the pardon of all Malians.

Prosecutor­s say Mahdi, born in 1975, was a member of the Ansar Dine, one of the jihadist groups linked to Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb which seized the northern territory before being mostly chased out by a French-led military interventi­on in January 2013.

Prosecutor­s have asked for a jail term of between nine and 11 years, which they said would recognize both the severity of the crime and the fact that Mahdi was the first person to plead guilty before the court.

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