Daily Trust Sunday

Mali Islamist jailed for nine years for Timbuktu shrine attacks

- Source: BBC.com

The Internatio­nal Criminal Court has sentenced an Islamist militant who destroyed ancient shrines in Timbuktu to nine years in jail.

Ahmad al-Faqi al-Mahdi admitted to leading rebel forces who destroyed historic mausoleums at the world heritage site in Mali in 2012.

Judges at the court in The Hague found he had shown “remorse and empathy” for the crime.

It is the first sentence based on cultural destructio­n as a war crime.

It is also the first time a suspected Islamist militant has stood trial at the ICC.

Mahdi - described as a “religious scholar” in court documents - led rebels who used pickaxes and crowbars to destroy nine of Timbuktu’s mausoleums and the centuries-old door of the city’s Sidi Yahia mosque.

The court found he not only offered “logistical and moral support” for the attacks, but also took part in the physical destructio­n of at least five out of the 10 buildings.

However, Mahdi had at first advised rebel leaders not to attack the shrines.

Admitting to the charges last month, Mahdi claimed he had been swept up in “an evil wave”.

Pleading guilty, he said: “I am really sorry, I am really remorseful, and I regret all the damage that my actions have caused.

“I would like to give a piece of advice to all Muslims in the world, not to get involved in the same acts I got involved in, because they are not going to lead to any good for humanity,” he added.

Rare ICC success: Analysis by Anna Holligan at The Hague

Wearing a grey suit, striped tie and spectacles, there was little sign of the violent jihadist responsibl­e for destroying these treasured shrines.

Ahmad al-Faqi al-Mahdi was a member of a group with links to al-Qaeda and the leader of the morality police (a religious vice squad operating in Timbuktu during the rebel occupation).

According to the judge, he wrote a sermon dedicated to the destructio­n, gave instructio­n and tools to complete the operation. His confession, a wellconsid­ered apology and apparent willingnes­s to co-operate with the court contribute­d to the nine year sentence.

While the case is being seen as a rare success for the ICC some of the victims in Mali say the charges don’t cover some of the most devastatin­g atrocities committed during the occupation - including violence against women, rape and sexual slavery.

Prosecutor­s said Mahdi was a member of Ansar Dine - an Islamist group with roots in the nomadic Tuareg group and links to al-Qaeda in the Maghreb - that occupied Timbuktu for months, instilling its own version of Sharia law on residents.

Islamists regard the shrines and the city’s ancient manuscript­s, covering everything from history to astronomy, as idolatrous.

The rebels decided to destroy the buildings after people continued to pray at the historic sites.

Mahdi led a series of planned attacks, starting with a sermon given during Friday prayers, and later gave press statements defending the actions.

However, his sentence was on the lower end of the scale after the ICC judges accepted a number of mitigating factors, including his confession.

Correspond­ents in Timbuktu, a Unesco world heritage site which had been a centre of Islamic learning from the 13th to the 17th Centuries, say the sentencing was generally welcomed.

One resident was more circumspec­t, telling the BBC he felt it difficult to forgive: “Forgivenes­s means coming here in Mali and asking for forgivenes­s to Malians and especially from the people of Timbuktu who suffered from the anger of jihadism.

“We will accept to forgive when Ahmad al-Faqi understand­s that this land is sacred, the shrines are sacred, and that understand­ing our culture is sacred.”

 ??  ?? Destroyed historic site
Destroyed historic site
 ??  ?? Ahmad al-Faqi al-Mahdi, the world’s first cultural war criminal
Ahmad al-Faqi al-Mahdi, the world’s first cultural war criminal

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria