In
the first case of its kind, an alleged Islamist militant accused of destroying
ancient monuments in Mali appeared last week at the International Criminal Court
(ICC) charged with damaging humanity’s cultural heritage. It is the first time
cultural heritage destruction has been prosecuted as a war crime; the ICC has
traditionally focused on atrocities committed against individuals.
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| Ahmad
Al Faqi Al Mahdi appears at the ICC in the Hague, Netherlands (Image: Robin van
Lonkhuijsen/AFP/Getty Images) |
Charges
Ahmad
Al Faqi Al Mahdi is charged with war crimes of directing attacks against
historic religious monuments and buildings, including nine mausoleums and one
mosque in Timbuktu, Mali.
Al
Mahdi, from the Ansar Tuareg tribe, was allegedly an active personality in the
context of the occupation of Timbuktu, a ‘zealous member’ of Ansar Dine, a
Tuareg extremist militia with links to al-Qaeda, and the head of the Hesbah (known
as the ‘Manners' Brigade’), which enforced strict Islamist law in Timbuktu
during civil unrest in Mali in 2012 and 2013. He is also charged with implementing
the hardline Sharia law rulings of the so-called Islamic Court of Timbuktu, in
particular the destruction of the nine mausoleums and the Sidi Yahia mosque.
The
situation in Mali was referred to the ICC by Mali’s government in 2012, and
following an investigation a warrant for Al Mahdi’s arrest was issued in
September 2015. Al Mahdi was arrested by the authorities of Niger and handed
over to the ICC shortly afterwards.
Timbuktu’s cultural heritage
Timbuktu, a UNESCO
World Heritage site known as the ‘city of 333 saints’, was an intellectual and
spiritual capital and a centre for the propagation of Islam throughout Africa
in the 15th and 16th centuries. The mausoleums of Timbuktu have long been
pilgrimage destinations for the people of Mali and neighbouring countries. As shrines
to Timbuktu's founding fathers, who were venerated as saints by most of the
city's inhabitants, they were widely believed to protect the city from danger.
But fundamentalists considered this practice blasphemous. Of the city’s 16
mausoleums, some dating as far back as the 13th century, 14 were destroyed during Ansar
Dine’s occupation of the city in 2012, along with mosques and approximately 4,000 ancient
manuscripts.
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Destruction of mausoleums and mosques during Timbuktu’s occupation (Image: AFP)
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What next?
Following
the defendant’s appearance before the Pre-Trial Chamber last week, a hearing is
scheduled for 18 January 2016, where the Court will determine whether there is
sufficient evidence to proceed to a full trial.
This case is a watershed moment in the
field of cultural heritage protection, and it has been suggested that the Court consider
investigating the Islamic State's destruction of ancient archaeological sites
in Palmyra. However, as neither Iraq nor Syria is a member of the ICC, the Court
is unable to intervene without a mandate from the UN Security Council.
Meanwhile an initiative to reconstruct Timbuktu’s
mausoleums led by the Malian government, UNESCO and international partners is nearing completion. “Here we have our
response to extremism,” said UNESCO’s Director-General, “an example of
the successful integration of culture in peace building and we must continue
along this road.”
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Reconstruction of Timbuktu’s mausoleums nears completion (Image: CRAterre/Thierry
Joffroy)
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The
ICC’s case information sheet for The
Prosecutor v. Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi can be found here.
More
information on Timbuktu’s cultural heritage can be found on the UNESCO World
Heritage Site page here.
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Posted By Marian to
Art and Artifice on 10/09/2015 04:32:00 a.m.