IS takes control of some areas in Syria’s ancient city

Published May 21, 2015
Baghdad: A group of Iraqis who fled Ramadi snapped after their arrival in Baghdad. The self-styled Islamic State has tightened its siege on the last government positions in the capital of Anbar province.—AFP
Baghdad: A group of Iraqis who fled Ramadi snapped after their arrival in Baghdad. The self-styled Islamic State has tightened its siege on the last government positions in the capital of Anbar province.—AFP

BEIRUT: Islamic State group militants took control of areas of the historic Syrian city of Palmyra from government forces in fierce fighting on Wednesday, and the Syrian antiquities chief called on the world to save its ancient heritage from the jihadists.

The central city, known as Tadmur in Arabic, is home to a Unesco World Heritage site and is also a strategic military location in central Syria linked by highways to the cities of Homs and Damascus, some 240 km to the southwest.

“The news at the moment is very bad. There are small groups that managed to enter the city from certain points,” Syria’s antiquities chief Maamoun Abdulkarim said.

“There were very fierce clashes.” Abdulkarim, who received Unesco’s Cultural Heritage Rescue Prize last year, said hundreds of statues had been moved to safe locations but called on the Syrian army, opposition and international community to save the site.

“The fear is for the museum and the large monuments that cannot be moved,” he said. “This is the entire world’s battle.” IS has destroyed antiquities and ancient monuments in neighbouring Iraq and is being targeted by US-led air strikes in both countries.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said that jihadist group had captured around a third of Palmyra.

Palmyra’s 2,000-year-old monuments, which lie on the south-western fringe of the modern city, were put on Unesco’s World Heritage in danger list in 2013. The ruins were part of a desert oasis that was one of the most significant cultural centres of the ancient world.

The attack is part of a westward advance by IS that is adding to the pressures on President Bashar al-Assad’s overstretched military and allied militia that are also losing ground to insurgents in the northwest.

Syrian state television said in a news flash that armed forces had confronted “the Daesh terrorist group” when it tried to enter a northern Palmyra neighbourhood.

A video posted by an activist network on YouTube appeared to show black smoke rising into the sky. The caption dated May 20 said it was footage of air strikes on the city. A communications tower and a citadel could be seen in the video.

The Observatory said the two sides were shelling each other and that the military had carried out air strikes.

Jihadists supporters posted pictures on social media showing what they said were gunmen in the streets of Palmyra, which is the location of one of Syria’s biggest weapons depots as well as army bases, an airport and a major prison.

In Syria’s northeast, Kurdish forces backed by US-led air strikes are pressing an attack on IS that has killed at least 170 members of the jihadist group this week, a Kurdish official and the Observatory said.

The Kurdish YPG, trying to drive jihadists from a stronghold in the mountainous Jabal Abdul Aziz area to the southwest of Tel Tamr, had taken control of large parts of the area, the Observatory said.

Published in Dawn, May 21st, 2015

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