The Borneo Post

IS destructio­n at Syria’s Palmyra a ‘war crime’

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This new blow against cultural heritage... shows that cultural cleansing led by violent extremists is seeking to destroy both human lives and historical monuments in order to deprive the Syrian people of its past and its future. Irina Bokova, director general of the Paris-based UN cultural agency Unesco

PARIS: The UN yesterday led condemnati­on of at tacks by Islamic State jihadists on two sites in Syria’s ancient city of Palmyra, calling the destructio­n a ‘ war crime’ and ‘cultural cleansing.’

In a statement, Irina Bokova, director general of the Parisbased UN cultural agency Unesco, described the wrecking as “a new war crime and an immense loss for the Syrian people and for humanity.”

“This new blow against cultural heritage... shows that cultural cleansing led by violent extremists is seeking to destroy both human lives and historical monuments in order to deprive the Syrian people of its past and its future,” Bokova said.

IS recaptured Palmyra, a Unesco World Heritage site, from government forces on December 11 and the new devastatio­n reportedly occurred earlier this month.

Syria’s ant iquit ies chief Maamoun Abdulkarim told AFP in Damascus earlier yesterday that local sources said IS destroyed Palmyra’s tetrapylon monument, while satellite images showed damage to the facade of the city’s Roman amphitheat­re.

The tetrapylon, built during the rule of the Roman Emperor Diocletian in the third century, consisted of four sets of four pillars each supporting massive stone cornices.

The monument had suffered considerab­le damage over the centuries and only one of the 16 pillars was still standing in its original Egyptian pink granite. The rest were cement replicas erected in 1963.

The Roman amphitheat­re dates to the first century and was used by IS for public executions during its occupation of the city between May 2015 and March 2016.

The jihadist group had already ravaged the city during the nine months it held the site before being forced out of Palmyra in a Russianbac­ked offensive last March.

Moscow yesterday deplored the new destructio­n, with President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov cal ling it “a real tragedy from the point of view of cultural and historical heritage.”

Asked whether the Russian military is likely to step in to recapture Palmyra for a second time, Peskov said only that: “Russian military continues to support the Syrians in battling terrorists.”

For his part, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, calling those who demol ish world treasures “barbarians”, added: “Such ideology and practice have absolutely no place in modern civilisati­on.”

Also yesterday, Unesco said years of conf lict in Syria had “totally destroyed” 30 per cent of the historic Old City of Aleppo — named a World Heritage Site in 1986 — and around 60 per cent of the quarter was “severely damaged.”

The mission reported “extensive damage” to the Citadel, a fortress dating to the first millennium BC, and the Great Mosque of Aleppo, the largest and one of the oldest of the city’s mosques.

The loss of east Aleppo was the biggest blow to Syria’s rebel movement in the nearly six-year conflict, which has killed more than 310,000 people.

Last year Internat ional Criminal Court judges jailed a Malian jihadist for nine years for demolishin­g Timbuktu’s fabled shrines in the first such case to focus on cultural destructio­n as a war crime.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? File photo shows the Tetrapylon, one of the most famous monuments in the ancient city of Palmyra, in Homs Governorat­e, Syria.
— Reuters photo File photo shows the Tetrapylon, one of the most famous monuments in the ancient city of Palmyra, in Homs Governorat­e, Syria.

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