Hundreds
of civilians start returning to Syria's Palmyra
2016-04-09 20:53:13.0
DAMASCUS, April 9 (Xinhua) -- Hundreds of civilians were transported on Saturday to the ancient city of Palmyra in the central province of Homs, following the Syrian military's recapture of that millennia-old oasis city, a government source told Xinhua.
2016-04-09 20:53:13.0
DAMASCUS, April 9 (Xinhua) -- Hundreds of civilians were transported on Saturday to the ancient city of Palmyra in the central province of Homs, following the Syrian military's recapture of that millennia-old oasis city, a government source told Xinhua.
Ten buses carrying civilians, including
women and children, headed on Saturday to Palmyra, as part of the government's
efforts to return the displaced people to their homes in the city, which was
taken by the Islamic State (IS) group last May and liberated by the Syrian army
and allied fighters last month, a source in the city of Homs told Xinhua.
Saturday's batch is the second to enter
Palmyra, as nearly 400 civilians returned last Thursday, the source said on
condition of anonymity.
"Today's number is higher than that of
Thursday. We have got hundreds of people heading back to their homes in
Palmyra," the source added.
Palmyra, which contains 2000-year-old monuments
and UNESCO world heritage, constitutes of the ancient part of the city and a
residential one.
Following the Syrian army's recapture of the
city late last month, the residential city was empty, except from the IS
booby-traps and roadside bombs.
The Syrian army with the help of Russian
sappers managed to dismantle hundreds of bombs to pave the way for the return
of the civilians.
Those who are now being taken back to their
homes are residents who had managed to flee the city ahead of the IS attack
last May, as the rest were taken by the IS when the Syrian army approached to
reclaim the city on March 27.
Since recapturing it last May, the IS
destroyed important monuments in Palmyra
They destroyed the Temple of Bel, which was
dedicated to the Mesopotamian god Bel, who was worshipped at Palmyra in triad
with the lunar god Aglibol and the sun god Yarhibol, formed the center of
religious life in Palmyra and was inaugurated in 32 AD.
Now, there is nothing left of the temple
except its gate, standing still to tell the generations that there was a temple
called Bel in the place.
Aside from Bel, another temple in Palmyra,
Baalshamin, was destroyed, nothing left of it.
Baalshamin, whose earliest phase dates to
the late 2nd century, was one of the most complete ancient structures in
Palmyra. In 1980, the UNESCO designated the temple as a World Heritage
Site.
The IS destroyed Baalshamin on Aug. 23,
2015.
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