Islamic State militants "bulldozed" the
renowned archaeological site of the ancient city of Nimrud in northern Iraq on Thursday using heavy military vehicles, the government said.
A statement from Iraq's Ministry of Tourism and
Antiquities didn't elaborate on the extent of the damage, saying only that the
group continues to "defy the will of the world and the feelings of
humanity" with this latest act, which came after an attack on the Mosul
museum just days earlier.
The destruction of the site of one of ancient
Mesopotamia's greatest cities recalled the Taliban's annihilation of large
Buddha statues in Afghanistan more than a dozen years ago, experts said.
Nimrud was the second capital of Assyria, an ancient kingdom that began in about 900 B.C., partially in present-day Iraq, and became a great regional power. The city, which was destroyed in 612 B.C., is located on the Tigris River just south of Iraq's second largest city, Mosul, which was captured by the Islamic State group in June.
The late 1980s discovery of treasures in Nimrud's royal tombs was one of
the 20th century's most significant archaeological finds. After Iraq was
invaded in 2003, archaeologists were relieved when they were found hidden in
the country's central Bank — in a secret vault-inside-a-vault submerged in
sewage water.
The Islamic State extremists have attacked other
archaeological and religious sites, claiming that they promote apostasy.
Earlier this week, a video emerged on militant websites showing Islamic State
militants with sledgehammers destroying ancient artefacts at the Mosul museum,
sparking global outrage.
Last year, the militants destroyed the Mosque of the Prophet Younis and
the Mosque of the Prophet Jirjis, two revered ancient shrines in Mosul. They
also threatened to destroy Mosul's 850-year old Crooked Minaret, but residents
surrounded the structure, preventing the militants from approaching.
Suzanne Bott, the heritage conservation project
director for Iraq and Afghanistan in the University of Arizona's College of
Architecture, Planning and Archaeology, worked at Nimrud on and off for two
years between 2008 and 2010. She helped stabilize structures and survey Nimrud
for the U.S. State Department as part of a joint U.S. military and civilian unit.
She described Nimrud as one of four main Assyrian capital cities that
practiced medicine, astrology, agriculture, trade and commerce, and had some of
the earliest writings.
"It's really called the cradle of Western
civilization, that's why this particular loss is so devastating," Bott
said. "What was left on site was stunning in the information it was able to convey about
ancient life.
"People have compared it to King Tut's tomb," she said.
Iraq's national museum in Baghdad opened its doors to the public last
week for the first time in 12 years in a move Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi
said was to defy efforts "to destroy the heritage of mankind and Iraq's
civilization."
The Islamic State group has imposed a harsh and
violent version of Islamic law in the territories it controls and has
terrorized religious minorities. It has released gruesome videos online showing the beheading of captives, including captured Western
journalists and aid workers.
Jack
Green, chief curator of the Oriental Institute Museum at the University of
Chicago and expert on Iraqi art, said Thursday that the IS group seems bent on
destroying objects they view as
idols representing religions and cultures that don't conform to their beliefs.
"It's the
deliberate destruction of a heritage and its images, intended to erase history
and the identity of the people of Iraq, whether in the past or the
present," Green said. "And it has a major impact on the heritage of
the region."Green noted that in many of these attacks on art, pieces that
can be carried away are then sold to fund the IS group, while the larger
artifacts and sculptures are destroyed at the site.
Gargi Purkayastha
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