"They are not Muslims, they are bandits!" raged Mohamed Elher Ag Abba, whose house flanks a famed archive in Timbuktu where retreating Islamists burnt priceless ancient books and manuscripts before fleeing, AFP reports. There was outrage around the world at the last defiant act of vandalism by the radicals in this fabled city as they fled a French-led offensive on their northern bastion that ended their 10-month occupation. The pickaxes and shovels wielded time and again by militants from Ansar Dine (Defenders of the Faith) against what they consider idolatrous shrines, erased part of the heritage of Timbuktu, founded between the fifth and 11th centuries by Tuareg desert nomads. Their final act of random destruction targeted the precious books, which they stacked in the courtyard of the centre and burnt on Friday evening before leaving the city, residents said. Timbuktu mayor Halley Ousmane has described the arson at the Ahmed Baba Centre for Documentation and Research as a "real cultural crime." 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. The ochre building, with its imposing wooden gates, is still intact. But its contents have been ravaged. "They burnt everything that remained here," said the centre's custodian Litni Dicko. "They also stole, they piled up a truck, covered it with canvas" and left, he said. "It really hit me, I don't know what to say." The remains of the rampage lie everywhere. Ashes litter the courtyard and there are vestiges of leather books with ornate decorations which were not entirely consumed by the flames. The tomes, mostly in Arabic and Fula -- a language widely spoken across west Africa -- covered a variety of subjects: astronomy, botany, music, law, history and politics. -- A byword for learning and exotic remoteness -- Timbuktu was for centuries a key centre of Islamic learning and a byword for exotic remoteness in the Western imagination. Known as "the City of 333 Saints" or "The Pearl of the Desert", it was listed as a UNESCO world heritage site in 1988 and has long attracted tourists for its magnificent mud-built mosques and shrines. Ansar Dine, which follows the hardline Wahhabi strain of Islam, began destroying the cultural treasures in the city in July believing them to be "haram" or forbidden. A local journalist said the occupiers had razed the shrines of 10 saints. But several others, located in the well-guarded and sprawling properties of the local gentry, have escaped destruction. Only the ones that were prominent were targeted. The best-known was the mausoleum of Sidi Mahmoud Ben Amar, who founded the city's first university in the 12th century. "It's the most symbolic as we say Sidi Mahmoud is the protector of the north," said local theologian Mahamalmoudou Tandina. In the cemetery also named after Sidi Mahmoud, the ruins of his shrine lie strewn in the dust. On July 1 last year, "the terrorists broke the walls with pickaxes and shovels," said Ousmane Eleguey, 30, adding: "It was as if we had lost everything!" Those gathered nearby echoed him. "It shocked the whole world," said one. "They said God does not accept such things," said a second. "They are bandits and drug addicts," added a third. The desolate scenes are replicated at the mausoleum of Alpha Moya, the "protector of the east" and Sidi Moctar, the "protector of the north-east." Timbuktu's heyday as an ancient trading hub, intellectual centre and cosmopolitan crossroads in the desert vanished under the Islamist occupation. Women were forced to wear veils and people flouting strict Islamic laws faced executions, brutal whippings or amputations. The city was throughout history a meeting point between north, south and west Africa, a melting pot of black Africans, Berber, Arab and Tuareg desert nomads. The trade of gold, salt, ivory and books made it the richest region in west Africa. It attracted scholars, engineers and architects from across the continent, growing into a major centre of Islamic culture by the 14th century. From the jewel of the ancient Malian Empire (1230-1600), which once spanned most of western Africa, Timbuktu fell back into Tuareg hands and later formed part of the Songhai Empire, one of the world's largest Islamic empires. But modern Timbuktu is an impoverished town where youth unemployment is high.
"They are not Muslims, they are bandits!" raged Mohamed Elher Ag Abba, whose house flanks a famed archive in Timbuktu where retreating Islamists burnt priceless ancient books and manuscripts before fleeing, AFP reports.
There was outrage around the world at the last defiant act of vandalism by the radicals in this fabled city as they fled a French-led offensive on their northern bastion that ended their 10-month occupation.
The pickaxes and shovels wielded time and again by militants from Ansar Dine (Defenders of the Faith) against what they consider idolatrous shrines, erased part of the heritage of Timbuktu, founded between the fifth and 11th centuries by Tuareg desert nomads.
Their final act of random destruction targeted the precious books, which they stacked in the courtyard of the centre and burnt on Friday evening before leaving the city, residents said.
Timbuktu mayor Halley Ousmane has described the arson at the Ahmed Baba Centre for Documentation and Research as a "real cultural crime."
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.
The ochre building, with its imposing wooden gates, is still intact. But its contents have been ravaged.
"They burnt everything that remained here," said the centre's custodian Litni Dicko.
"They also stole, they piled up a truck, covered it with canvas" and left, he said. "It really hit me, I don't know what to say."
The remains of the rampage lie everywhere. Ashes litter the courtyard and there are vestiges of leather books with ornate decorations which were not entirely consumed by the flames.
The tomes, mostly in Arabic and Fula -- a language widely spoken across west Africa -- covered a variety of subjects: astronomy, botany, music, law, history and politics.
-- A byword for learning and exotic remoteness --
Timbuktu was for centuries a key centre of Islamic learning and a byword for exotic remoteness in the Western imagination.
Known as "the City of 333 Saints" or "The Pearl of the Desert", it was listed as a UNESCO world heritage site in 1988 and has long attracted tourists for its magnificent mud-built mosques and shrines.
Ansar Dine, which follows the hardline Wahhabi strain of Islam, began destroying the cultural treasures in the city in July believing them to be "haram" or forbidden.
A local journalist said the occupiers had razed the shrines of 10 saints.
But several others, located in the well-guarded and sprawling properties of the local gentry, have escaped destruction.
Only the ones that were prominent were targeted. The best-known was the mausoleum of Sidi Mahmoud Ben Amar, who founded the city's first university in the 12th century.
"It's the most symbolic as we say Sidi Mahmoud is the protector of the north," said local theologian Mahamalmoudou Tandina.
In the cemetery also named after Sidi Mahmoud, the ruins of his shrine lie strewn in the dust.
On July 1 last year, "the terrorists broke the walls with pickaxes and shovels," said Ousmane Eleguey, 30, adding: "It was as if we had lost everything!"
Those gathered nearby echoed him.
"It shocked the whole world," said one. "They said God does not accept such things," said a second. "They are bandits and drug addicts," added a third.
The desolate scenes are replicated at the mausoleum of Alpha Moya, the "protector of the east" and Sidi Moctar, the "protector of the north-east."
Timbuktu's heyday as an ancient trading hub, intellectual centre and cosmopolitan crossroads in the desert vanished under the Islamist occupation. Women were forced to wear veils and people flouting strict Islamic laws faced executions, brutal whippings or amputations.
The city was throughout history a meeting point between north, south and west Africa, a melting pot of black Africans, Berber, Arab and Tuareg desert nomads.
The trade of gold, salt, ivory and books made it the richest region in west Africa. It attracted scholars, engineers and architects from across the continent, growing into a major centre of Islamic culture by the 14th century.
From the jewel of the ancient Malian Empire (1230-1600), which once spanned most of western Africa, Timbuktu fell back into Tuareg hands and later formed part of the Songhai Empire, one of the world's largest Islamic empires.
But modern Timbuktu is an impoverished town where youth unemployment is high.