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IS at Gates of Syria's Palmyra Raising Fears for Ancient City

Islamic State group fighters advanced to the gates of ancient Palmyra Thursday, raising fears the Syrian world heritage site could face destruction of the kind the jihadists have already wreaked in Iraq.

As it overran nearby villages, IS executed 26 civilians -- 10 of whom were beheaded -- for "collaborating with the regime," the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. 

Syria's head of antiquities issued an urgent appeal for international action to save Palmyra, saying extremist militants were less than two kilometers (barely a mile) from the remains of one of the most important cultural centers of the ancient world. 

The world "must mobilize before, not after, the destruction of the artifacts" at the site, Mamoun Abdulkarim said in a telephone call.

"IS has not entered the city yet, and we hope these barbarians will never enter," he said. 

"But if IS enters Palmyra, it will be destroyed and it will be an international catastrophe," Abdulkarim added. 

UNESCO describes Palmyra as a heritage site of "outstanding universal value."

The ancient city stood on a caravan route at the crossroads of several civilizations and its 1st and 2nd century temples and colonnaded streets mark a unique blend of Graeco-Roman and Persian influences.

Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said the city was "under threat" as fierce fighting and shelling continued on its eastern edges amid a regime counter-offensive. 

The jihadist advance on the well-preserved remains came as an international conference was under way in Cairo to address destruction already wreaked by IS on the ancient sites of Nimrud and Hatra in Iraq.

- 'Barbarism and savagery' -

Foreign affairs and antiquities officials from 11 Arab countries gathered in Egypt to condemn the jihadists' demolition of Iraq's heritage with sledgehammers, bulldozers and high explosives.

Abdulkarim said Syria's antiquities officials would try to ensure the safety of artifacts found in Palmyra's archaeological digs over the years and now housed in an adjacent museum.

"We can protect the statues and artifacts, but we cannot protect the architecture, the temples," he said. 

"IS will just destroy it from the outside." 

Abdulkarim said he had no doubt that if Palmyra fell to the jihadists, it would suffer a similar fate to ancient Nimrud, which they blew up earlier this year.

"If IS enters Palmyra, it will spell its destruction... It will be a repetition of the barbarism and savagery which we saw in Nimrud, Hatra and Mosul."

It would not be the first time that government troops have lost control of Palmyra. Rebels held the site from February to September 2013 before the regime recaptured it.

One of the ancient city's masterpieces, the Temple of Baal, suffered some damage during the accompanying artillery exchanges.

But those rebels did not share the fanatical devotion of IS to demolishing all of the region's pre-Islamic heritage.

There was ferocious fighting as the jihadists overran the town of al-Sukhnah on Wednesday in their drive across the desert towards Palmyra.

Syria's official news agency reported that military aircraft had destroyed IS vehicles near al-Sukhnah and that army units "killed IS terrorists" in the area. 

Provincial governor Talal Barazi said that 1,800 families who had fled the advancing jihadists were being sheltered in reception centers in the adjacent modern town of Tadmur.

Both sides suffered heavy losses in the battle for aAl-Sukhnah, including senior commanders, the Observatory said.

The army lost 70 men, including six officers. IS lost 55 men, including two commanders, one of them the leader of the offensive.

Jihadist websites named him as Abu Malik Anas al-Nashwan, who appeared in an IS video showing the beheadings of 28 Ethiopian and Eritrean Christians in Libya earlier this year.

Source: Agence France Presse


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