The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group has
demolished a monastery founded more than 1,500 years ago in the central
Syrian province of Homs, close to where it abducted scores of Christians
earlier this month, activists and a Christian priest said.
The destruction of the Saint Elian Monastery near the town of
Qaryatain comes days after ISIL fighters in the city of Palmyra publicly
beheaded
a respected antiquities scholar who had dedicated his life to studying and overseeing Palmyra's iconic ancient ruins.
The developments have stoked concerns that ISIL may be
accelerating its campaign to destroy and loot heritage sites inside the
areas of Iraq and Syria the group controls.
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ISIL kills renowned archaeologist Khaled Asaad in Palmyra
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"I think we are worried about almost all the heritage sites
in Syria. Nothing is safe," Irina Bokova, director general of UNESCO,
told the AP news agency.
Bokova said that ISIL's "view on culture and heritage is just the opposite of what UNESCO stands for".
The group, which captured the Qaryatain area in early
August, posted photos on social media on Friday that showed bulldozers
destroying the Saint Elian Monastery.
A Christian clergyman told the AP in Damascus that ISIL
members wrecked a church inside the monastery that dates back to the 5th
century.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which
tracks Syria's conflict, also reported the destruction of the
monastery.
A Qaryatain resident who recently fled to Damascus, also
told the AP that ISIL members had levelled the shrine and removed the
church bells.
OPINION: With scholar's killing, ISIL steps up its war on history
On Tuesday, Khaled Asaad, a respected 82-year-old scholar
who worked for 50 years as head of antiquities in Palmyra, was beheaded,
seemingly after ISIL failed to extract information on the whereabouts
of hidden artefacts.
In July, the group destroyed a famous statue of a lion outside Palmyra's museum, after taking over and
looting the ancient city, known as Tadmur in Arabic.
Earlier this month in Qaryatain, ISIL abducted at least 230
people, including 60 Christians from a church, after capturing the town
after heavy fighting with the Syrian army, the Syrian Observatory said.
Qaryatain is near a road linking Palmyra to the Qalamoun mountains, along the border with Lebanon.
ISIL has previously claimed responsibility for destroying
shrines - Christian and Muslim - as well as churches. It has vowed to
rid territory it controls in Syria and Iraq of symbols of what it calls
idolatry.
Source: Al Jazeera And AP
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