Another Palmyra temple bombed
A powerful blast in the ruins of Syria's ancient Palmyra raised fears yesterday that the Islamic State group has damaged another of the Middle East's most treasured heritage sites.
Both Syria's antiquities chief and a monitor reported the Sunday blast in the Unesco World Heritage site, but there was conflicting information on the fate of its famed Temple of Bel.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitor, said late Sunday that ISIS fighters had set off explosives inside the 2000-year-old Temple of Bel, at least partially destroying the centrepiece of Palmyra's famed ruins.
Mohammad Hassan al-Homsi, an activist from Palmyra, also reported the partial destruction on Sunday night. "They laid the explosives today, using booby-trapped boxes and barrels that were already prepared by IS," he said.
"This was the most important temple for tourists and for the people of Palmyra. They used to hold festivals there." Homsi, who goes by a pseudonym, said the inner part of the temple was destroyed in the blast.
But Syria's antiquities chief Maamoun Abdulkarim said the explosion did not appear to have damaged the temple significantly.
"The frontal columns and the cella (interior) of the temple do not appear to have been damaged," Abdulkarim said yesterday.
"According to the information we received from the town, the temple is still standing, but antiquities staff are not able to enter the site to see close up," he said.
There were no immediate images released by ISIS of the reported destruction.
ISIS destroyed the smaller Baal Shamin temple at Palmyra last week, confirming the worst fears about their intentions for the site, which they seized from Syrian regime forces in May.
The jihadists have carried out a sustained campaign of destruction against heritage sites in areas under their control in Syria and Iraq, and in mid-August beheaded the 82-year-old former antiquities chief in Palmyra.
That destruction was first reported by activists and Abdulkarim and was later shown in photos released by ISIS.
The UN training and research agency UNITAR said that new satellite images of Palmyra confirmed the demolition.
ISIS captured Palmyra on May 21, sparking international concern about the fate of the heritage site described by Unesco as of "outstanding universal value".
Known as the "Pearl of the Desert", Palmyra, which means City of Palms, lies 210 kilometres northeast of Damascus. Before the arrival of Christianity in the second century, Palmyra worshipped the Semitic god Bel, along with the sun god Yarhibol and lunar god Aglibol.
Abdulkarim said the Temple of Bel was Palmyra's most important site. "It is the best example of the combination of Oriental and Greco-Roman art styles," he said.
"Along with the temple of Baalbek in Lebanon, it is the most important temple in the Middle East.
"It is special because its different features are still intact," he added.
Construction on the temple began in 32 BC and ended in the second century, and it later served as both a church and a mosque.
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