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Jjihadist to face Timbuktu war crimes charge

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Judges at the International Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian Judges at the International Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian jihadist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.

The judges ruled they would “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their cultural identity”.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.
jihadist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.

The judges ruled they would “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their cJudges at the International Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian jihadist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.

The judges ruled they would “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their cultural identity”.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.
ultural identity”.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.
Judges at the International Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian jihadist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.

The judges ruled they would “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their cultural identity”.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.
ZJudges at the International Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian jihJudges at the International Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian jihadist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.

The judges ruled they would “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their culJudges at the International Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian jihadist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.

The judges ruled they would “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their cultural identity”.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.
tural identity”.
Judges at the International Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian jihadist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.

The judges ruled they would “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their cultural identity”.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.
adist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.

The judges ruled they would “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historJudges at the International Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian jihadist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.

The judges ruled they would “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their cultural identity”.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.
ic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their cultural identity”.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.
Zd1)ZGEuI1qA49wVEjJudges at the International Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian jihadist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.
Judges at the InteJudges at the International Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian jihadist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.

The judges ruled they woulJudges at the International Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian jihadist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.

The judges ruled they would “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their cultural identity”.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.
d “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their cultural identity”.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.
rnatiJudges at the International Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian jihadist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.

The judges ruled they would “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their cultural identity”.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.
onal Criminal Court on Thursday agreed there was enough evidence to put an alleged Malian jihadist on trial for the destruction of the centuries-old world heritage site of Timbuktu.

The judges ruled they would “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their cultural identity”.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.

The judges ruled they would “commit” Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi to trial for “the war crime of attacking buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments” in 2012, when many of the ancient shrines were destroyed.

Faqi, aged about 40, is the first jihadist suspect to appear before the ICC and the first person to face a war crimes charge for an attack on a global historic and cultural monument.

Prosecution for the attack on the ancient Malian shrines comes amid a global outcry over the razing by the so-called Islamic State group of sites in Iraq and Syria that bear testament to the world’s collective history.

A member of an Islamic court set up by the Malian jihadists to enforce strict sharia law, Faqi is said to have jointly ordered or carried out the destruction of nine mausoleums and Timbuktu’s famous Sidi Yahia mosque, dating back to the 15th and 16th centuries.

The judges confirmed a charge against Faqi which alleges he is “criminally responsible as a direct perpetrator… for physically taking part in the attack against at least half of the targeted buildings dedicated to religion and historic monuments”.

Prosecutors allege the jihadists set upon the shrines with pick-axes and iron bars, as well as vehicles, in what ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has called a “callous assault on the dignity of an entire population and their cultural identity”.

Founded between the 11th and 12th centuries by Tuareg tribes, Timbuktu, located about 1 000km from Mali’s capital Bamako, has been dubbed “the city of 333 saints” and the “Pearl of the Desert.”

It was added to the list of Unesco world heritage sites in 1988.

Despite having been a centre of Islamic learning during its golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, it is considered idolatrous by the jihadists.

ICC prosecutors say Faqi was a leader of Ansar Dine, a mainly Tuareg group, which held sway over Mali’s northern desert together with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and a third local group from early 2012 until being routed in a French-led intervention in January 2013.NEWS24


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