IS jihadists close to being run out of Palmyra, after a campaign of destruction against historic monuments. | |||||
Middle East Online | |||||
PALMYRA
- Syria's antiquities chief on Thursday hailed the "imminent" recapture
of the ancient city of Palmyra from the Islamic State group and vowed
to rebuild the famed monuments the jihadists have destroyed.
"I
have feelings of fear and joy," Maamoun Abdelkarim told AFP as
government troops and militia prepared for a final assault on the city.
"I
am so happy that the liberation is imminent... and that the nightmare
is nearly over, before it is too late, before the total destruction of
the ancient city."
IS overran Palmyra -- a UNESCO world heritage site renowned as the "Pearl of the Desert" -- last May.
Three
months later, the jihadists beheaded the city's's 82-year-old former
antiquities chief Khaled al-Assaad and launched a campaign of
destruction against its most treasured monuments.
First
they destroyed the ancient shrine of Baal Shamin. In September, they
demolished the 2,000-year-old Temple of Bel, a gem of Classical
architecture. In October, they blew up the Arch of Triumph, dating from
around 200 AD.
"I think this 10-month period has been the worst of our lives," Abdelkarim said.
"How many times have tears welled up in our eyes because we felt powerless to save a civilisation that was threatened with being erased before our eyes.
"I
fear finding even worse destruction than the demolition of the two
temples, of the dozen tower tombs and the Arch of Triumph."
Abdelkarim pledged that all monuments destroyed by IS would be restored with expert help.
"We
will rebuild the two temples under supervision from UNESCO and other
international organisations. The message of the Syrian people is that we
cannot leave the two temples in ruins. We are determined to bring
Palmyra back to life," he said.
"Palmyra is not just Syria's heritage, it is the world's heritage and must be shared."
Abdelkarim said he would head to the city as soon as the army had secured control.
"The liberation of Palmyra will go down in history, at least in the history of the Middle East," he said.
"I believe it will be as significant an event as the Normandy landings by the Allies in World War II."
The
oasis city of Palmyra was a major centre of the ancient world as it lay
on the caravan route linking the Roman Empire with Persia and the east.
Situated
about 210 kilometres (130 miles) northeast of Damascus, it drew some
150,000 tourists a year before it became engulfed by Syria's devastating
civil war.
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Friday, 25 March 2016
Syria antiquities chief vows to rebuild lost treasures
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