Three months after announcing the project, UNESCO has raised only 3 million USD, said Lazare Eloundou, the head of UNESCO's office in Mali. That figure that has not changed since April.
The director of UNESCO's New York office, Vibeke Jensen, said raising 8 million USD may not seem difficult, but it competes with appeals for help on horrific humanitarian crises such as those in Iraq and Syria.
Islamic radicals who overran Timbuktu in 2012 destroyed 14 of the city's 16 mausoleums, one-room structures that house the tombs of the city's great thinkers. The mausoleums are now barely more than heaps of mud, reminders of the brutal rule of the jihadists, who imposed Shariah law on the fabled city, forced women to wear veils and carried out executions and public whippings. The extremists were driven after nearly a year by a French military intervention.
"We want the community to rebuild their own heritage. It's not just about rebuilding stones. It's also about keeping the cultural significance and keeping the role that the mausoleum had in structuring the life of the community," he said.