Baltimore Sun Sunday

ISIS militants re-enter historic Palmyra in Syria

Iraqi soldiers flee lightly guarded city, activists say

- By Philip Issa

BEIRUT — Islamic State militants re-entered the historic city of Palmyra in central Syria on Saturday for the first time since they were expelled by Syrian and Russian forces nine months ago.

The activist-run Palmyra Coordinati­on network said the militants had nearly encircled the city and entered its northern and northweste­rn neighborho­ods. The group, which maintains contacts inside the city, said ISIS fighters were also approachin­g the city’s UNESCO heritage site.

Osama al-Khatib said government soldiers were fleeing Palmyra.

“The army as an institutio­n has dissolved,” he said. Some soldiers and militiamen remain in the city, along with 120 families who have not been able to leave, Khatib said from Gaziantep, Turkey.

“There is strong fighting on all sides,” he reported. “There is no exit except through a corridor to the west.”

The reversal in Palmyra comes days after ISIS militants in the Iraqi city of Mosul launched a major counteratt­ack that surprised Iraqi soldiers, killing at least 20 and halting their advance. Iraqi special forces units have entered the eastern outskirts of the largest remaining ISIS-held city, but their advance has been slowed by both a desire to limit civilian casualties and the resilience of the militants. During the 10 months that ISIS held Palmyra, from May 2015 to March 2016, the militants dynamited several of the city’s famed ancient Roman monuments and executed its archaeolog­ical director.

After the city was retaken, the Russian government staged a classical music concert in the city’s soaring Roman amphitheat­er last May to celebrate the success. The Syrian and Russian government maintain they are defending the global community against Islamic terrorism in the country’s devastatin­g 51⁄2-year war.

After taking Palmyra, the two states turned their attention to wiping out the internal opposition in Damascus and Aleppo, leaving the historic city relatively unguarded.

Syrian state media had no comment.

Mohammad Hassan Homsi of the Palmyra News Network reported that a military division withdrew from the city earlier Saturday without leaving a way out for civilians.

According to Homsi, only 350 families had returned to the city of its original 30,000 inhabitant­s after the government retook the city to great fanfare in March.

ISIS militants were shelling the government’s military airport to the east of the city, according to the Coordinati­on group.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights says the militants reached the city’s Tadmor Hospital and its wheat silos.

The militants advanced on Palmyra after seizing several government positions, oil fields and strategic hilltops in the surroundin­g countrysid­e in a lightning three-day campaign.

Earlier Saturday, the militants’ Aamaq News Agency claimed the group shot down a government warplane in the Jazal oil fields west of the city.

The Observator­y said the jet had crashed for reasons unknown.

 ?? YOUSSEF BADAWI/EPA 2016 ?? The Islamic State, which held Palmyra from May 2015 to March 2016, moved back into the historic city Saturday.
YOUSSEF BADAWI/EPA 2016 The Islamic State, which held Palmyra from May 2015 to March 2016, moved back into the historic city Saturday.

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