Ahmad al-Faqi al-Mahdi

Ahmad al-Faqi al-Mahdi (also known as Abu Tourab) was a member of Ansar Dine, a Tuareg Islamic extremist militia in North Africa. Al-Mahdi pleaded guilty in 2016 in the International Criminal Court (ICC) for the war crime of attacking religious and historical buildings in the Malian city of Timbuktu. Al-Mahdi was the first person convicted in the ICC for such a crime. He was sentenced to nine years in prison.

Biography

Al-Mahdi was born in Agoune, Mali, which is 97 km west of Timbuktu.[1] He is an ethnic Tuareg and during the Northern Mali conflict that began in 2012, he was a member of Ansar Dine. Al-Mahdi worked closely with the leaders of Ansar Dine and al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb when the two groups controlled Timbuktu. Specifically, he enforced decisions of the Islamic Court of Timbuktu and from May to September 2012, he ran the "Manners' Brigade".[2]

ICC prosecution

The ICC opened a formal investigation in Mali on 16 January 2013 to investigate alleged crimes that occurred since January 2012 in the context of an armed conflict in the north of the country.[3] The Court issued an arrest warrant for al-Mahdi on 18 September 2015. The arrest warrant alleges that from about 30 June 2012 to 10 July 2012 in Timbuktu, al-Mahdi committed the war crime of intentionally directing attacks against historical monuments or buildings dedicated to religion. The case against al-Mahdi represented the first time the ICC had indicted an individual for the war crime of attacking religious buildings or historical monuments and it was the first case before the ICC arising out of the situation in Mali.[2] The arrest warrant listed ten monuments in Timbuktu, at least one of which is a World Heritage Site, that al-Faqi attacked:[2]

  1. Mausoleum of Sidi Mahmoud Ben Omar Mohamed Aquit
  2. Mausoleum of Sheikh Mohamed Mahmoud al-Arawani
  3. Mausoleum of Sheikh Sidi Mokhtar Ben Sidi Muhammad Ben Sheikh Alkabir
  4. Mausoleum of Alpha Moya
  5. Mausoleum of Sidi Mahmoud Ben Amar
  6. Mausoleum of Sheikh Muhammad El Micky
  7. Mausoleum of Cheick Abdoul Kassim Attouaty
  8. Mausoleum of Ahamed Fulane
  9. Mausoleum of Bahaber Babadié
  10. Sidi Yahya Mosque

On 26 September 2015, al-Mahdi was surrendered to the Court by the government of Niger and transferred to the Court's detention center in The Hague, Netherlands.[2] Al-Mahdi's trial began on 22 August 2016; he pleaded guilty to the charges of destroying the nine mausoleums and the mosque.[4][1]

The first person to plead guilty to a charge at the ICC, al-Mahdi made a statement expressing remorse and advising others not to commit similar acts.[5]

On 27 September 2016, al-Mahdi was sentenced to nine years in prison for the destruction of the cultural heritage.[1]

References


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