Iraq heritage sites at risk

Iraq heritage sites at risk

November 02, 2016
Iraq heritage sites at risk
Iraq heritage sites at risk

Baghdad — Iraqi heritage sites targeted in a campaign of destruction by the Daesh group are again at risk during the operation to retake Mosul.

Daesh vandalized the Mosul museum after overrunning the city in 2014 and attacked sites including the ancient cities of Hatra and Nimrud, posting videos lauding the destruction online.

As Iraqi forces close in on Mosul, the terrorists’ last main bastion in the country, officials say Daesh has fighters deployed at or near archaeological sites.

“Our information indicates that (Daesh) has a presence in the archaeological sites,” Ahmed Al-Assadi, the spokesman for the Hashed Al-Shaabi, an umbrella organization for pro-government paramilitary forces, told AFP.

“We expect (Daesh) will try to lure the advancing forces to the sites for the purpose of increasing their destruction,” Assadi said.

Daesh had earlier set up a training camp at Hatra, which is a UNESCO world heritage site, and still has militants deployed there, according to Ali Saleh Madhi, the local official responsible for the area.

At Nimrud, Daesh rigged structures with explosives and blew up the site, but the terrorists are still present nearby, said Ahmed Al-Juburi, the area’s administrator.

Assadi said that Hashed forces would use “extreme care” when they near the sites, and that “every effort must be made to protect and preserve them.”

When the operation to retake Mosul was launched on October 17, the head of UNESCO urged parties to the conflict to protect heritage sites.

“I call on all involved in military action to protect cultural heritage and refrain from any military use or targeting of cultural sites and monuments,” Irina Bokova said.

Both UNESCO and Iraq’s culture ministry said they gave coordinates of heritage sites to anti- Daesh forces in an effort to protect them.

Deputy Culture Minister Qais Rasheed said that anti- Daesh forces had been informed of sites where terrorists were present, and that Daesh “places weapons and sometimes trains its fighters in archaeological areas.”

The lists could help limit air strikes in sensitive areas and encourage Iraqi ground forces to exercise some restraint, but they will not hold IS back.

Since overrunning swathes of Iraq in 2014, the terrorists have embarked on an orgy of destruction that they have justified as religiously mandated elimination of idols.

In reality, the attacks on Iraqi cultural heritage have been carried out for propaganda purposes, and Daesh has stolen and sold artifacts that it allegedly reviles to fund its operations.

In February last year, Daesh released a video showing militants armed with sledgehammers and jackhammers rampaging through the Mosul museum, destroying statues and defacing an imposing granite Assyrian winged bull at the city’s Nergal Gate.
The destruction sparked international outrage.

A few months later, Daesh released another video shot at Hatra, a well-preserved city southwest of Mosul that is more than 2,000 years old and has a unique mix of eastern and Western architecture.

The video showed militants knocking sculptures off walls, shooting at them with an assault rifle and hacking away at a statue with a pickaxe.

A third video was released a few days later showing Daesh smashing artifacts at the ancient Assyrian city of Nimrud, which was founded in the 13th century, before blowing up the site.

“The demolition of the Mosul museum and the destruction of archeological remains in Nineveh will remain in human history as one of the most barbaric attacks against the heritage of humanity,” UNESCO said.

“These crimes must not remain unpunished.” — AFP


November 02, 2016
HIGHLIGHTS