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View Full Version : ISIS beheads 82-year-old archaeologist in Palmyra, Syrian official says



Teh One Who Knocks
08-19-2015, 10:52 AM
FOX News and The Associated Press


http://i.imgur.com/zvXTmz4.jpg

ISIS militants have beheaded an 82-year-old archaeologist who had been in charge of overseeing the ancient site at Palmyra in Syria, a government official said Tuesday.

Syrian state antiquities chief Maamoun Abdulkarim told Reuters that the family of Khaled Asaad had informed Abdulkarim that Asaad had been beheaded earlier in the day and his body hanged from a column in the town's main square.

Asaad's death was also reported by the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. The Observatory, which has a network of activists on the ground in Syria, said dozens of people gathered to witness the killing.

Abdulkarim said that Asaad had been held and interrogated by members of the terror group for over a month before his death. The official said that Asaad's captors had been looking for information about where the town's treasures had been hidden to save them from ISIS, but they had no success getting the information from the scholar.

ISIS seized Palmyra, whose Roman-era ruins attracted thousands of tourists prior to Syria's civil war, from government forces in May. In the days and weeks before the city fell, Syrian officials said they had moved hundreds of statues out of concern that they would be destroyed by ISIS fighters.

"Just imagine that such a scholar who gave such memorable services to the place and to history would be beheaded ... and his corpse still hanging from one of the ancient columns in the center of a square in Palmyra," Abdulkarim said. "The continued presence of these criminals in this city is a curse and bad omen on (Palmyra) and every column and every archaeological piece in it."

Asaad spent over 50 years working at the UNESCO World Heritage site, including alongside U.S., French, German, and Swiss archaeological missions. He also wrote many books and scientific texts either individually or in cooperation with other Syrian or foreign archeologists, SANA said. Among his titles are "The Palmyra Sculptures," and "Zenobia, the Queen of Palmyra and the Orient."

Abdulkarim described Asaad as "one of the most important pioneers in Syrian archaeology in the 20th century." The country's official news agency SANA reported that Asaad had been in charge of Palmyra's archaeological site for four decades until 2003, when he retired. After retiring, al-Asaad worked as an expert with the Antiquities and Museums Department.

Asaad, who held a diploma in history and education from the University of Damascus, also discovered several ancient cemeteries, caves and the Byzantine cemetery in the garden of the Museum of Palmyra, the agency reported.

"Al-Asaad was a treasure for Syria and the world," Khalil Hariri from Palmyra's archaeological department told The Associated Press, speaking over the phone from the central Syrian city of Homs. "Why did they kill him?"

"Their systematic campaign seeks to take us back into pre-history," he added. "But they will not succeed."

ISIS drew international condemnation after it released videos showing members destroying artifacts with hammers and drills in a museum in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul and using explosives to wreck other sites.

In March, ISIS members in Iraq razed 3,000-year old Nimrod and bulldozed 2,000-year old Hatra — both UNESCO world heritage sites. At the time, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon described the action as a "war crime."

However, it is not completely clear what ISIS has done with Palmyra's Roman-era ruins. In June, ISIS blew up two shrines that did not date from Roman times, but were regarded by the militants as pagan and sacrilegious under their strict interpretation of Islam. One of the destroyed tombs belonged to a descendant of the Muslim prophet Muhammad's cousin. ISIS also destroyed a lion statue in the town dating back to the 2nd century. The statue, discovered in 1975, had stood at the gates of the town museum, and had been placed inside a metal box to protect it from damage.

In early July, ISIS released a video showing the killing of some 20 captured government soldiers in Palmyra's amphitheater. They were shot dead by young IS members, armed with pistols. Hundreds of people were seen watching the killings.

HyperV12
08-19-2015, 12:53 PM
Unbelievable!

Goofy
08-19-2015, 12:59 PM
Cunts

Hugh_Janus
08-19-2015, 06:43 PM
Unbelievable!

is it though?

HyperV12
08-19-2015, 07:32 PM
is it though?

To normal people yes! Or at least I hope so. If a genie gave me 3 wishes my first one would be to wish all religions didn't exist, they're the biggest source of death and conflict over the ages.

Hugh_Janus
08-19-2015, 08:18 PM
To normal people yes! Or at least I hope so. If a genie gave me 3 wishes my first one would be to wish all religions didn't exist, they're the biggest source of death and conflict over the ages.

but these cockmunches have been beheading every fucker for ages

deebakes
08-19-2015, 10:44 PM
:rip:

HyperV12
08-19-2015, 10:58 PM
but these cockmunches have been beheading every fucker for ages

As have the Christians, which is why religion has to go.

DemonGeminiX
08-19-2015, 11:04 PM
That's an awfully broad brush stroke. And one that's false. Christians haven't beheaded people for centuries. Nor committed any violent acts as an organizational decree. I know I haven't killed anybody (Catholic), but I honestly wouldn't mind beheading a few of these fuckers after force-feeding them some pork.

Hugh_Janus
08-20-2015, 12:20 AM
As have the Christians, which is why religion has to go.

not really my point.... it's always being reported that ISIS are beheading people, so it's no surprise that they've done it again, and will continue to do it for the forseeable future

RBP
08-20-2015, 04:18 AM
That's an awfully broad brush stroke. And one that's false. Christians haven't beheaded people for centuries. Nor committed any violent acts as an organizational decree. I know I haven't killed anybody (Catholic), but I honestly wouldn't mind beheading a few of these fuckers after force-feeding them some pork.

I don't like the Crusades comparisons either, but I am not sure I can agree with that portion of your statement. They clearly did.

DemonGeminiX
08-20-2015, 04:53 AM
In recent memory? By Church decree? I don't think so.

RBP
08-20-2015, 04:55 AM
In recent memory? I don't think so.

:lol: Well no, I have no memory of the Crusades.

DemonGeminiX
08-20-2015, 05:11 AM
:lol:

I'm not gonna say that atrocities haven't been committed in the name of every god that man has ever held in high regard, but we can all chalk that up to intellectual and moral evolution, that facet of the growing pains that humans had to go through to get to this point in time. If we're OK with a person blaming Christianity today for the atrocities of the past, then it should follow that Black people have a right to blame us white people today for the enslavement of their ancestors. Yet most level headed rational human beings don't accept that. Even uber-Atheist Dawkins has stated in interviews that Christianity is relatively benign.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQzuFrMRA3M

HyperV12
08-20-2015, 07:53 AM
All I was trying to say was that all religions have, at some point, committed atrocities which is why I would 86 them.

DemonGeminiX
08-20-2015, 03:55 PM
All religions have been used as an excuse to commit atrocities, whether they implicitly or explicitly state in their doctrines that atrocities should be committed in their name. If you got rid of religion, human beings would still find reasons to be horrible to each other. That's just what humans do. They always have and they always will. This isn't a religion issue, it's a "human beings being shitty fuckers" issue. Solve that and leave your intolerance towards religion behind.

Hal-9000
08-20-2015, 04:52 PM
All I was trying to say was that all religions have, at some point, committed atrocities which is why I would 86 them.

So have human beings. Just because your great great great grandfather captained a slave ship, doesn't mean that you're a supporter of slavery.

Christian here :wavey:

You may find that a lot of wars have been fought over land rights, resources and wealth...yet were placed under the false umbrella of 'religion' as the reason for the conflict.

Like DGX, I understand that a lot of horrible things have been done in the name of a deity, but saying all must go is offensive (to me) and I would never judge another person, based on events that happened 1000 years ago.

The radical Islam army kinda clouds my statement because they commit atrocities today and fully claim it's in the name of their religious beliefs. I've know enough Muslims in my personal life to realize the assholes in the news do not represent the whole when it comes to Muslim faith.

And yes part of me agrees sometimes...the world would be a better place without people hurting each other in the name of faith.

HyperV12
08-20-2015, 09:02 PM
All religions have been used as an excuse to commit atrocities, whether they implicitly or explicitly state in their doctrines that atrocities should be committed in their name. If you got rid of religion, human beings would still find reasons to be horrible to each other. That's just what humans do. They always have and they always will. This isn't a religion issue, it's a "human beings being shitty fuckers" issue. Solve that and leave your intolerance towards religion behind.

I agree that human beings being shitty fuckers is and always has been an issue, I'm not intolerant of religion I just neither understand nor believe in it but I realise that there are sufficient people that do. The main differences between days of yore and the present as I see it are, today the technology used is more effective and it is reported worldwide almost immediately, the atrocities themselves remain just that, atrocities. By the same token though, the same technology is being used to recruit new radicals under the Religious umbrella which is where I was coming from in wanting it gone.

HyperV12
08-20-2015, 09:05 PM
So have human beings. Just because your great great great grandfather captained a slave ship, doesn't mean that you're a supporter of slavery.

Christian here :wavey:

You may find that a lot of wars have been fought over land rights, resources and wealth...yet were placed under the false umbrella of 'religion' as the reason for the conflict.

Like DGX, I understand that a lot of horrible things have been done in the name of a deity, but saying all must go is offensive (to me) and I would never judge another person, based on events that happened 1000 years ago.

The radical Islam army kinda clouds my statement because they commit atrocities today and fully claim it's in the name of their religious beliefs. I've know enough Muslims in my personal life to realize the assholes in the news do not represent the whole when it comes to Muslim faith.

And yes part of me agrees sometimes...the world would be a better place without people hurting each other in the name of faith.

Apologies for any offence, not intentional or meant.