Toronto Star

Palmyra a ghost town after Daesh destructio­n

Traces of fighting still seen at UNESCO heritage site

- ALBERT AJI

PALMYRA, SYRIA— Explosions rocked the ancient town of Palmyra on Friday and on the horizon, black smoke wafted behind its majestic Roman ruins, as Syrian army experts carefully detonated hundreds of mines they say were planted by Daesh militants before they fled the town.

A crew for The Associated Press visiting the town Friday witnessed firsthand the destructio­n inflicted by the extremist group on the town’s famed archeologi­cal site, less than a kilometre away from the modernday town of the same name, now completely deserted.

While some parts of the site, including the Roman-era grand colonnades and amphitheat­re appeared relatively untouched, the damage was very much visible elsewhere.

The remarkable Arch of Triumph, built under the Roman emperor Septimius Severus between A.D. 193 and A.D. 211, has been reduced to a pile of stones, blown up by Daesh (also known as ISIS or ISIL) extremists who filmed the destructio­n for the world to see. The monumental arch once sat atop the famed colonnaded streets of the ancient town. The Temple of Baalshamin and parts of the Temple of Bel, one of the best-preserved Roman-era sites, are also destroyed.

Apart from the Roman ruins themselves, heavy damage could be seen on parts of the walls of Palmyra’s towering Mamluk-era citadel, built during the Islamic conquest in the 13th century. On top of the scarred citadel, a Syrian flag flies in the wind.

Palmyra is located about 248 kilometres east of Damascus, the Syrian capital. Government troops, backed by allied militiamen and Russian airstrikes, retook the town on Sunday from Daesh militants who had controlled Palmyra and its environs for 10 months.

“The Syrian army is defending Rome and London in as much as it is defending Damascus.” SYRIAN MILITARY OFFICER

Ancient Palmyra is a UNESCO heritage site — an archeologi­cal gem that attracted tens of thousands of tourists every year.

It was completely deserted on Friday, except for Syrian army soldiers working on dismantlin­g explosives and visiting journalist­s. The town — about a kilometre away from the ruins — is completely deserted, its remaining residents had fled as the Syrian army’s offensive against Daesh began a month ago.

Traces of the fighting could be seen all around. Burned cars parked on the side of the road, electricit­y cables strewn about on the streets and scattered empty water tanks apparently used as barricades.

At the entrance to the Roman amphitheat­re, where Daesh filmed children shooting captive Syrian soldiers in the head, black graffiti is sprayed on a stone wall.

“Lasting and Expanding,” it read in Arabic, a logo of Daesh. “Daesh” is scribbled on another nearby wall.

A Syrian officer told reporters that more than 3,000 mines have so far been dismantled. “They boobytrapp­ed everything, trees, doors, ani- mals,” he said, speaking of the militants.

Russian sappers have arrived in Syria to help the Syrian army clear mines in and around the town.

Later Friday, Syria’s state-run SANA news agency reported that Syrian engineerin­g teams and popular defence groups uncovered a mass grave in a northeaste­rn neighbourh­ood of Palmyra containing the remains of about 40 people, 23 of them women and children.

The report, which could not be independen­tly verified, said the people were killed by Daesh extremists. It said some bodies were beheaded, others bore signs of torture.

The recapture of Palmyra was a strategic coup for President Bashar Assad through which he hopes to convince the West that the Syrian army is a credible partner in combating terror as it ramps up the fight against Daesh.

“The Syrian army is defending Rome and London in as much as it is defending Damascus,” another officer told the visiting reporters Friday. Both officers spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to give statements to media crews.

He handed reporters a booklet he said the militants had apparently distribute­d to Palmyra residents.

It reads: “Loyalty to Islam, not to the nation.”

 ?? OMAR SANADIKI/REUTERS ?? Palmyra’s remarkable Arch of Triumph, built between 193 A.D. and 211 A.D., has been reduced to a pile of stones by Daesh militants.
OMAR SANADIKI/REUTERS Palmyra’s remarkable Arch of Triumph, built between 193 A.D. and 211 A.D., has been reduced to a pile of stones by Daesh militants.

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