...what the international legal extremists cannot achieve, they pass it to a banch of life and cultural ignorants to do the crime. In the meantime the world enjoys the tv from their sofa, still reacting for what happens in the world.... but from the safe environment of their shelter.... Where we are heading???
Mashable
The ruins
of an ancient city that have withstood centuries of conflict in the Syrian
desert are now facing their greatest threat yet: the militants of the Islamic
State.
Activists,
officials and citizens of the city say ISIS has launched a prolonged assault on
Palmyra, an "oasis in the desert" north of Damascus that the U.N.
cultural agency UNESCO says contains the "monumental ruins of a great city
that was one of the most important cultural centers of the ancient world."
The group's
Director-General, Irina Bokova, has now appealed to the world for help saving
the site it describes as having "outstanding universal value."
Camels go
past stone pillars, a relic of the Roman Empire, in the desert city of Palmyra,
central Syria, on Oct. 1, 2010.
"We
must save Palmyra," said UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova on Thursday
as word of the militants advance on the city spread. "The site has already
suffered four years of conflict, it suffered from looting and represents an
irreplaceable treasure for the Syrian people and for the world. I appeal to all
parties to protect Palmyra and make every effort to prevent its
destruction."
On Friday,
Bokova turned up the heat.
"The
stakes are high," declared Bokova at a conference in Egypt on the theft
and destruction of antiquities in the region. "The destruction and looting
of archaeological sites and museums have reached unprecedented levels. The
destruction of cultural heritage, the cultural cleansing, is being used as a
tactic of war to terrify populations, to finance criminal activities and to
spread hatred."
"We
must consider it for what it is: A war crime."
A video
posted on internet on February 26, 2015 shows ISIS or Daesh (Daech) or "Islamic
State" group militants destroying statues inside the Nineveh museum,
northern Iraq.
A video
posted on internet on February 26, 2015 shows ISIS or Daesh (Daech) or
"Islamic State" group militants destroying statues inside the Nineveh
museum, northern Iraq. Some of the statues date from 8th century BC.
On Twitter,
historians lamented what appears to be Palmyra's seemingly impending
destruction. One said it would "be like the felling of the grandest tree
in the forest of civilization."
Not
everyone's convinced ISIS is after the city's historic ruins, though. Some even
say that the warnings over Palmyra's imminent destruction may only serve to
hasten its demise.
Charles
Lister, a fellow at the Brookings Doha Center, said on Twitter it wasn't the
ruins the militants were after — just any "idols" that still stand in
their midst. "ISIS only destroys objects seen as 'idols'," said
Lister. "Palmyra ruins are not that. Global focus & fear over their
fate only encourages destruction."
"Why
would ISIS destroy Palmyra ruins?" asked Hassan Hassan, co-author of the
New York Times bestseller ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror. They "might
destroy the mini-museum nearby but not the columns. If anything the warnings
will make it do that...to annoy and make headlines," he added.
The U.N.'s
cultural agency says the city stands as a "unique relic" of the first
century and "a masterpiece of architecture and Roman urbanism." It's
impacted centuries of architecture and attracted thousands of tourists over the
years.
The site
was inscribed as a World Heritage Property in 1980 and added to the UNESCO List
of World Heritage in Danger in 2013. It's already suffered moderate-to-severe
damage in the fighting, according to a recent damage assessment by the United
Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR).
A 2014
damage assessment by United Nations Institute for Training and Research
(UNITAR) described the extend of destruction to the historical sites in
Palmyra.
While the
ruins still stand, time is running out, local officials say.
The world
"must mobilize before, not after, the destruction of the artifacts"
at Palmrya, Syria's director of antiquities & museums told the AFP.
"If ISIS enters Palmyra, it will be destroyed and it will be an
international catastrophe," Mamoun Abdulkarim said of the city's temples,
ruins and tombs. "You can hide the objects, but how can you save ancient
architecture?"
The fight
for the city
Activist
groups such as the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the
Local Coordination Committees said that Syrian government warplanes have been
attacking positions of the Islamic State group on the eastern edge of Palmyra.
There has also been fighting on the ground, the groups said.
A photo
posted on internet on April 7, 2015 shows ISIS or Daesh (Daech) or
"Islamic State" group militants posing in Yarmouk (Yarmuk)
Palestinian camp, located in a suburb of Damascus, Syria, that is partially now
under their control.
On Friday,
Syrian state news agency SANA said troops were "chasing" IS fighters
in several areas north and east of Palmyra.
A local
fighter there told Syria Direct the city's streets are nearly empty of
pedestrians, with snipers targeting residents who try to flee.
"We
are afraid. It's a real war. "We are afraid. It's a real war. We didn’t
sleep at all last night. We can't go out of the house and we don't know what's
going to happen," a resident of the town told Middle East Eye. "There
are snipers outside. The war is on."
Another
asked how he could care about the ruins when lives are at risk. "I am so
anxious. I don't care who controls it, we just don't want a long battle,"
he said of the impending fight. "There are people who care about the
ruins. But [how can] you care about the ruins? There are civilians here."
More than
200,000 civilians have been reported killed in Syria's civil war and dozens of
historic monuments, mosques, churches and ruins have been destroyed — by both
sides of the conflict.
Some
information in this report was provided by the Associated Press. Have something
to add to this story? Share it in the comments.
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