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startingarabic
08-22-2016, 11:06 AM
War Crimes against Tombs of Great Thinkers

Islamist pleads guilty at ICC to destroying Timbuktu mausoleums

An Islamist extremist has pleaded guilty at the international criminal court to the destruction of religious monuments in the ancient Malian city of Timbuktu in 2012.

As his historic ICC trial started in The Hague on Monday, Ahmad al-Mahdi told judges he was entering the guilty plea “with deep regret and great pain” and advised Muslims around the world not to commit similar acts, saying “they are not going to lead to any good for humanity”.

Mahdi led a group of radicals who destroyed 14 of Timbuktu’s 16 mausoleums in 2012 because they considered them to be totems of idolatry. The one-room structures which housed the tombs of the city’s great thinkers were on the Unesco world heritage list.

The trial is the first at the ICC to cite destroying cultural artefacts as a war crime, and Mahdi is the first ICC defendant accused of war crimes to enter a guilty plea.

In 2012, Tuareg rebels attacked Timbuktu, backed by al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb and armed with weapons from Libya. They enforced sharia law, banning music, which is central to Malian culture, forcing women to wear the burqa and preventing girls from attending school.

Mahdi, who is from a village 62 miles (100km) from Timbuktu, was accused of having joined the jihadis, who were trying to hire local people to build their credibility, and leading the vice squad. He was handed over by Niger’s government after the ICC issued an arrest warrant.

His trial is scheduled to last a week, with prosecutors presenting judges with evidence of the crimes and his defence lawyer also planning a presentation. Judges will issue a formal verdict and pass sentence at a later hearing.

Mahdi faces a maximum sentence of 30 years imprisonment, but prosecutors say they will seek a sentence of nine to 11 years. He told the three-judge panel he hopes his time in prison “will be a source of purging the evil spirits that had overtaken me”.

Associated Press contributed to this report
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startingarabic
08-22-2016, 11:09 AM
Plucked from the edges of the Sahara to a courtroom in The Hague, the bespectacled Mahdi is accused of "intentionally directing attacks" against nine of Timbuktu's famous mausoleums as well as the Sidi Yahia mosque between June 30 and July 11, 2012.
Founded between the fifth and the 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu's very name evokes centuries of history and has been dubbed "the city of 333 saints" for the number of Muslim sages buried there.
Revered as a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries and a designated UNESCO world heritage site, Timbuktu was however condemned as idolatrous by the jihadists.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-08-2...uction/7775194
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aaj
08-23-2016, 03:13 PM
This is a joke. Real world war crimes are being committed against innocent people and the world cares about this?
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