The Borneo Post

ICC to rule on damage of Timbuktu shrines by Islamist rebel

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THE HAGUE: Internatio­nal war crimes judges are to rule Tuesday in the case of a former Islamist rebel who pleaded guilty to wrecking holy shrines during Mali’s 2012 conflict and apologised for the damage he caused in Timbuktu.

It is the first case at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court focusing on cultural destructio­n as a war crime.

During a two-day trial in August Ahmad al-Faqi al-Mahdi asked for forgivenes­s and said he had been swept up in an ‘evil wave’ by al- Qaeda and the Ansar Dine Islamist groups that briefly seized control of the ancient sites.

As part of a plea agreement the prosecutio­n and the defence requested a sentence of between 9 and 11 years in prison. However, the judges are free to ignore the recommenda­tion and hand down a sentence of up to 30 years.

Mahdi has admitted to charges of involvemen­t in the destructio­n of historic mausoleums in the North African city. Prosecutor­s say he led a group of religious police using pick- axes and crowbars to destroy nine mausoleums and the door of a mosque, and at times took part himself.

Most of the sites dated from Mali’s 14th- century golden age as a trading hub and centre of Sufi Islam, a branch of the religion seen as idolatrous by some hardline Muslim groups.

During the trial, prosecutor Fatou Bensouda compared the attacks to Islamic State’s smashing of monuments in the Syrian city of Palmyra and the 2001 destructio­n of the Afghan Bamiyan Buddha statues by the Taliban. If convicted, Mahdi, who estimates his age at 45, would be the first defendant to be found guilty of Islamist-related charges by the global court. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A UN peacekeepe­r from Burkina Faso stands guard at the Djinguereb­er mosque, built in the 14th century, during a visit by a UN delegation on election day in Timbuktu, Mali. — Reuters photo
A UN peacekeepe­r from Burkina Faso stands guard at the Djinguereb­er mosque, built in the 14th century, during a visit by a UN delegation on election day in Timbuktu, Mali. — Reuters photo

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