Google – AFP, Marc Bastian (AFP), 29 January 2013
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A Malian
soldier trys to disperse looters in the streets of Timbuktu on
January 29, 2013
(AFP, Eric Feferberg)
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TIMBUKTU,
Mali — Hundreds of Malians looted Arab-owned shops Tuesday in Mali's fabled
Timbuktu, newly freed from Islamists, as global donors pledged over $455 million
for a French-led drive to rout the radicals from the north.
Life in the
ancient desert city freed from Islamist control on Monday started returning to
normal as soldiers patrolled its dusty streets, but soon large crowds began
pillaging.
They
plundered stores they said belonged to Arabs, Mauritanians and Algerians who
they accuse of supporting the Al Qaeda-linked Islamists during their 10-month
rule over the ancient centre of Islamic learning.
The looters
took everything from arms and military communications equipment to televisions,
food and furniture, emptying shops in minutes.
In the
suburb of Abaradjou, a man living in a former bank converted by the Islamists
into a "committee of promotion of virtue and prevention of vice", was
dragged out by a hysterical crowd who then pillaged the building, taking even
office chairs.
The bearded
middle-aged man was arrested by Malian troops. "He is an Islamist",
one soldier said, as other troops turned their weapons towards the crowd to
prevent them from lynching the man.
The mob
yelled: "He is not from here, he is a terrorist!"
Malian
soldiers put an end to the looting in the middle of the morning.
"We
will not let people pillage. But it is true that weapons were found in some
shops," an officer said on condition of anonymity.
African
leaders and international officials meanwhile pledged over $455 million (340
million euros) at a donor conference in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa for
military operations in Mali and humanitarian aid.
"I am
glad to report that the overall amount that was pledged here reached the amount
of $455.53 million," African Union peace and security commissioner Ramtane
Lamamra said, after the conference in the AU headquarters in Ethiopia.
A woeful
lack of cash and logistical resources has hampered deployment of nearly 6,000
west African troops under the African-led force for Mali (AFISMA) which is
expected to take over the offensive from the French army.
So far,
just 2,000 African troops have been sent to Mali or neighbouring Niger, many of
them from Chad whose soldier contribution is independent from the AFISMA force.
The bulk of fighting has been borne by some 2,900 French troops.
Lamamra
said Monday the African force will cost $460 million, with the AU promising to
contribute an "unprecedented" $50 million for the mission and Mali's
army.
The
International Monetary Fund has agreed to provide an $18.4 million emergency
loan to Mali. Japan said it would give an extra $120 million to help stabilise
the Sahel region, days after 10 Japanese nationals were killed in the Algerian
hostage siege.
The far
northern town of Kidal is the biggest goal remaining for the troops, and many
of the Islamists who fled their strongholds before the soldiers arrived are
believed to have melted away into the hills surrounding the town, 1,500
kilometres (932 miles) northeast of the capital Bamako.
Amid the
euphoria over the French-led troops' victory in Timbuktu, shock spread over
reports the fleeing Islamists had torched a building housing priceless ancient
manuscripts dating back to the Middle Ages.
Timbuktu
mayor Halley Ousmane, speaking from the capital Bamako, confirmed accounts of
the fire at the Ahmed Baba Centre for Documentation and Research.
"It's
a real cultural crime," he said.
Set up in
1973, the centre housed between 60,000 and 100,000 manuscripts, according to
Mali's culture ministry. However experts believe many of the documents may have
been smuggled out and hidden when the crisis began.
Radical
Islamists seized Timbuktu 10 months ago as they took control of Mali's desert
north in the chaos that followed a military coup last March.
They forced
women in Timbuktu to wear veils, and those judged to have violated their strict
version of Islamic law were whipped and stoned. The militants also destroyed
ancient Muslim shrines they considered idolatrous.
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