logo
Syrians back to famed Palmyra ruins scarred by IS

Syrians back to famed Palmyra ruins scarred by IS

Yahoo10-02-2025
Syrians are once again picnicking and smoking shisha amid the ruins of ancient Palmyra, once desecrated by jihadists but still awe-inspiring, and open to the public following the overthrow of president Bashar al-Assad.
The city's renowned ruins, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, were twice overrun by the Islamic State group, which proceeded to destroy many of the most famed structures.
Although they were driven out, the Syrian government and its allies, including Russia and Iran, then set up military bases nearby, effectively barring public access.
Open to the public once more, Yasser al-Mahmoud, 54, was among dozens of formerly displaced Syrians rediscovering the beloved landmarks that still bear scars of war.
"We used to come here every Friday, before" the war, Mahmoud said, pouring hot tea into glass cups placed atop a massive column's stone base.
"Now we're back and we can reconnect with our memories," he said, standing near his wife and children.
"People are so happy," he said.
Spread out across the ruins, families were carrying bags of food and making tea, while young people smoked shisha.
"We really missed the ruins. We haven't been here since 2015," when IS first invaded the area before being forced out for good in 2017.
Mahmoud said he wanted to reopen his stall selling trinkets and jewellery once visitors returned to Palmyra -- which attracted more than 150,000 tourists a year before civil war broke out in 2011.
Nearby, two huge columns forming a squared arch stood amid a sea of rubble -- all that remained of the Temple of Bel after IS jihadists detonated explosives inside it.
- Illegal excavations -
Known to Syrians as the "Pearl of the Desert", Palmyra was home to some of the best-preserved classical monuments in the Middle East before Syria's 13-year war.
But IS launched a campaign of destruction after capturing Palmyra, using its ancient theatre as a venue for public executions and murdering its 82-year-old former antiquities chief.
The jihadists blew up the shrine of Baal Shamin, destroyed the Temple of Bel, dynamited the Arch of Triumph, looted the museum and defaced statues and sarcophagi.
While the jihadists are gone, danger still looms over Palmyra.
The director general of antiquities and museums in Syria, Nazir Awad, told AFP he was concerned about illegal excavation.
There are guards, he said, "but I don't think they can do their work to the fullest extent, because of random and barbaric excavations across very wide areas".
People looking for ancient artefacts to loot are using heavy machinery and metal detectors that are "destructive", adding that the digging was "destroying layers of archaeological sites, leaving nothing behind".
- 'A military zone' -
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor said Assad's allies established "military sites and positions" in Palmyra and its archaeological sites, even taking up residence in its hotels.
In a sign of their presence, Israeli air strikes in November on the modern city killed 106 Tehran-backed fighters, according to the British-based monitor with a network of sources in Syria.
Former rebel fighter Khaldun al-Rubaa, 32, said Palmyra had been turned "from an archaeological site into a military zone" that was off-limits to visitors.
He worked at Palmyra's ancient sites from childhood, giving tourists camel rides and, like many Palmyra residents, tourism was his main source of income, he said.
Now that Assad-allied armed groups and foreign armies have left, Rubaa has returned home, hoping to trade his arms for a camel.
He held a picture on his phone of him as a young boy riding his camel, killed in the fighting, with the Arch of Triumph in the background.
"Palmyra and the ruins have been through horrors. The site has seen IS, Iran, the Russians, all of the militias you could think of," he said.
Yet he is among the lucky ones able to settle back home.
After 12 years of displacement Khaled al-Sheleel, 57, said he has yet to return to his house, destroyed in an Israeli strike.
He now works as a taxi driver, mostly carrying residents wishing to visit or return home.
"We have no homes, we cannot return," he said.
But "despite the destruction, I was overjoyed, I knelt on the ground and cried tears of joy when I returned" for the first time.
dco-ohk/aya-lk/dcp
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israeli gunfire kills at least 25 in Gaza as Netanyahu says he will allow Palestinians to leave
Israeli gunfire kills at least 25 in Gaza as Netanyahu says he will allow Palestinians to leave

NBC News

time9 hours ago

  • NBC News

Israeli gunfire kills at least 25 in Gaza as Netanyahu says he will allow Palestinians to leave

TEL AVIV, Israel — Israeli gunfire killed at least 25 people seeking aid in Gaza on Wednesday, health officials and witnesses said, while Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu again called for what he refers to as the voluntary migration of Palestinians from the war-ravaged territory. Netanyahu wants to realize U.S. President Donald Trump's vision of relocating much of Gaza's population of over 2 million people through what he refers to as 'voluntary migration' — and what critics have warned could be ethnic cleansing. 'Give them the opportunity to leave! First, from combat zones, and also from the strip if they want,' Netanyahu said in an interview aired Tuesday with Israeli TV station i24 to discuss the planned offensive in areas that include Gaza City, where hundreds of thousands of displaced people shelter. 'We are not pushing them out but allowing them to leave.' Witnesses and staff at Nasser and Awda hospitals, which received the bodies, said people were shot on their way to aid distribution sites or while awaiting convoys entering Gaza. Efforts to revive ceasefire talks Efforts to revive ceasefire talks have resumed after apparently breaking down last month. Hamas and Egyptian officials met Wednesday in Cairo, according to Hamas official Taher al-Nounou. Israel has no plans to send its negotiating team to talks in Cairo, Netanyahu's office said. Israel's plans to widen its military offensive against Hamas to parts of Gaza it does not yet control have sparked condemnation at home and abroad, and could be intended to raise pressure on Hamas to reach a ceasefire. The militants still hold 50 hostages taken in the Oct. 7, 2023 attack that sparked the war. Israel believes around 20 are still alive. Families fear a new offensive endangers them. he wanted all hostages back, alive and dead.

Trump's time for choosing
Trump's time for choosing

Politico

time9 hours ago

  • Politico

Trump's time for choosing

DIPLOMACY IS A TEAM SPORT — Donald Trump has made no secret of which world leaders he admires, and which ones he's content to ignore. But as he embarks on a solo mission to end conflicts from Eastern Europe to the Middle East, America's traditional allies — many of whom have been sidelined until now — are hoping to convince him diplomacy is a team sport. A closed-door meeting between the U.S. president and Russia's Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday will be a test of Trump's much-vaunted deal-making, and of his personal relationship with a man he once hinted he could see as a 'friend.' Anxious at the fact Ukraine was shut out of the talks, European countries have launched a major lobbying effort to ensure Trump doesn't give everything away. Along with Vice President JD Vance, Trump sought to reassure partners in a virtual summit hosted by Germany on Wednesday, insisting he wouldn't force Ukraine to surrender territory as part of an agreement brokered with Moscow. After the meeting, Latvia's Prime Minister Evika Siliņa — one of Kyiv's staunchest allies — told me Vance 'was very clear that it is up to Ukraine, and only Ukraine, to decide on its territory.' 'President Trump is an excellent and unique negotiator, so I believe he will aim for the best possible outcomes of the upcoming talks,' she said, while revealing Eastern European nations had warned the White House of their own experiences with Russian leaders, 'including that they often fail to keep promises in the long term.' Officials in Brussels and capitals across Europe are hoping a recent warming of relations between the Trump administration and NATO members will continue, and that his historic affinity with authoritarian strongmen is fading. As POLITICO's Felicia Schwartz and Eli Stokols first reported, the lead-up to the Alaska summit has seen an unprecedented uptick in Trump talking to, briefing and even strategizing with the EU, even if diplomats aren't certain he'll ultimately listen to them. Members of the bloc are also trying to prise him away from another long-time friend — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — as Europe hits a turning point in condemnation for the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, with growing international support for recognition of Palestinian statehood. 'Until last year the only European state that recognized Palestine was Sweden — now you even have players like France and the U.K. announcing an intention to recognize statehood,' said Mouin Rabbani, a Palestinian scholar and founder of the Jadaliyya news site. 'And a country like Germany saying it will suspend the export of weapons that could be used in Gaza. These things are unprecedented.' 'It's clear Israel is being hit by a diplomatic, cultural and economic tsunami,' said Ahron Bregman, a former Israeli military officer and war studies researcher at King's College London. 'The Israelis put all the eggs in one basket — the Trump basket — but he can see what's happening in [European] countries and there might be a point where, even for Trump, it will be too much.' Foreign policy is at the heart of the latest charm offensive toward Trump — led by leaders like Britain's Keir Starmer, Germany's Friedrich Merz and Poland's populist new president, Karol Nawrocki. But whether they can replace Putin and Netanyahu in Trump's good graces may only become clear later this week. Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@ Or contact tonight's author at ggavin@ What'd I Miss? — Trump floats circumventing Congress to maintain control of DC police: President Donald Trump today suggested that he could avoid congressional approval to extend his 30-day federal takeover of Washington's police, amid his efforts to wrest control of the capital's law enforcement. Trump this week invoked the Home Rule Act, effectively handing the executive branch control over Washington's police for up to 30 days. Beyond that, Trump would have to go through Congress for an extension authorization. But during his speech announcing the 2025 Kennedy Center honorees on Wednesday, Trump repeatedly floated circumventing Congress to maintain his hold over the city's law enforcement. 'If it's a national emergency we can do it without Congress, but we expect to be before Congress very quickly,' Trump said. — Trump warns Putin ahead of Alaska summit: President Donald Trump warned today that Russia would face 'very severe consequences' if he determines during Friday's summit with Vladimir Putin that the Russian leader is still not serious about ending the war with Ukraine. Trump, who did not specify what those consequences might be, has been reluctant to increase economic sanctions or tariffs on Russia despite his mounting frustration with Putin's intensifying attacks on Ukrainian cities, civilians and indifference to peace talks. Lowering expectations that the sit-down with Putin in Alaska would yield a breakthrough, Trump said that he's hopeful this initial meeting could lead to another that includes Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, and, potentially, Trump. — Humanitarian groups cannot challenge Trump's impoundment of foreign aid grants, appeals court rules: A federal appeals court today rejected a bid by humanitarian groups to challenge the Trump administration's freeze on foreign aid grants. The ruling overturned a district judge's injunction that had directed the administration to restore the flow of the grants. In the split decision, a three-judge panel of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals didn't consider the merits of the aid groups' arguments that President Donald Trump illegally impounded congressionally appropriated funding. The majority instead vacated the injunction on procedural grounds. It found that the grantees couldn't bring a constitutional claim that hinged on an alleged violation of law. — Trump leaves his mark on the Kennedy Center Honors: President Donald Trump on Wednesday announced this year's Kennedy Center honorees — the first since his takeover of the institution — further molding Washington's iconic performing arts center in his image. Trump announced at a press event at the Center that he would host this year's annual event where musician George Strait, actor and comedian Michael Crawford, actor Sylvester Stallone, singer Gloria Gaynor and rock band KISS will all be awarded. It was an unusually public role for a president, who has focused early in his term on remaking the Kennedy Center. Earlier this year he fired multiple members of the board of the art institution and installed himself as chair. AROUND THE WORLD REAFFIRMING ALIGNMENT — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin held a phone call to discuss their deepening ties and war efforts against Ukraine, the countries' state media said Wednesday, ahead of Putin's planned meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump in Alaska. Putin during the call on Tuesday praised the 'bravery, heroism and self-sacrificing spirit' displayed by North Korean troops as they fought with Russian forces to repel a Ukrainian incursion into Russia's Kursk border region, North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency said. Putin also shared with Kim information about his upcoming talks with Trump scheduled to take place Friday in Alaska, according to Russia's TASS news agency, citing the Kremlin. The North Korean reports did not mention the Trump meeting. TICKING CLOCK — Iran has less than three weeks to resume talks on its nuclear program or face the reimposition of sanctions, France, Germany and the U.K. said in a joint letter sent to the United Nations. The so-called E3 countries said they would trigger the 'snapback mechanism should no satisfactory solution be reached by the end of August 2025,' in a letter sent last week and shared by French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot today. Snapback mechanisms were included in the 2015 Iran nuclear deal — which the U.S. unilaterally withdrew from three years later under Donald Trump's first presidency. They allow for crippling sanctions against Tehran — which were lifted as part of the agreement — to be automatically reinstated if Iran violates key nuclear commitments. Nightly Number RADAR SWEEP A TRIP HOME — Decades after his parents fled Vietnam, Tony Ho Tran returned with them this year on the 50th anniversary of the war's end. As a kid, Tran formed an image of the country as he obsessed over Vietnam War movies and listened his parents' horror stories from their life before they immigrated. As an adult, he felt a shift in how Vietnamese people saw themselves, as Anthony Bourdain ate his way through Hanoi and shows like The Sympathizer entered the mainstream. Greeted with celebrations and National Liberation Front flags, Tran was confronted with a country that looked nothing like the Vietnam he thought he knew. He reflects on his recent family journey through Vietnam for Slate. Parting Image Jacqueline Munis contributed to this newsletter. Did someone forward this email to you? Sign up here.

Zohran's rent-stabilized digs: Letters to the Editor — Aug. 14, 2025
Zohran's rent-stabilized digs: Letters to the Editor — Aug. 14, 2025

New York Post

time10 hours ago

  • New York Post

Zohran's rent-stabilized digs: Letters to the Editor — Aug. 14, 2025

The Issue: Andrew Cuomo's proposal for 'Zohran's Law' to stop the wealthy from exploiting rent control. Will New Yorkers finally wake up and elect someone who cares about crime, the cleanliness of the city and its taxpayers ('Cuo: 'Zohran's Law' to save apt. for needy,' Aug. 11)? Zohran Mamdani, who talks tough about taxing the millionaires and billionaires, is the son of millionaires and also makes $142,000 as a state assemblyman while living in a rent-stabilized apartment. He's nothing but a hypocrite, who will break the backs of New York's hard-working taxpayers. Advertisement Michael Greaney Massapequa As a tenant in a rent-regulated apartment, I agree with Andrew Cuomo's proposal to impose a means-test for occupants of these dwellings. Advertisement Many tenants of New York City's million rent-regulated units have low or moderate incomes. But some are privileged people in power who abuse the system, like Mamdani. No one who earns more than $100,000 a year (about twice the city median income) should qualify for a rent-regulated apartment. Those units belong to the needy, not the greedy. It is time to reform New York's rancid rent laws. Richard Reif Kew Gardens Hills Advertisement While Cuomo is right to criticize socialist Mamdani for gaming the rent-stabilization system, he's guilty of a staggering hypocrisy in calling for means-testing renters. As governor, Cuomo signed the notorious 2019 law preventing landlords from raising rents in exchange for Major Capital Improvements. As a result, over 20,000 apartments are left vacant, while the city faces a growing housing shortage. Robert Spitalnick Great Neck Advertisement Wow. The Post is really scraping the bottom of the barrel to find fault with Mamdani. It's not like he's paying $150 a month for a five-room rent-controlled apartment. If someone bought a house at a low price and then property values suddenly went up, why would they think: 'I'd better move. It's not fair that I was so lucky'? Carol Puttre-Czyz East Village The Post reports that Mamdani has a nice subsidized one-bedroom apartment. As a socialist — likely even a communist — I'm sure Mamdani would welcome a few new roommates to share his largesse. Don Phelan Avon, Conn. The Issue: Mahmoud Khalil's attempt to justify Hamas' Oct. 7 attacks in a New York Times interview. How did terrorist mouth­piece Mahmoud Khalil get legal US residency ('Cries to boot bum Khalil,' Aug. 8)? Advertisement This moral degenerate thinks that Hamas' rape, beheading and burning of children, women and men was necessary to derail a Saudi-Israeli peace deal. He's now free to spew his demented hatred for Jews all over the media, igniting fantasies of murdering Jews. Someone should tell Khalil that a guest doesn't attack the values of those who have invited him into their homes. Steve Heitner Middle Island Advertisement I just don't understand how anyone can support Hamas, which engaged in these egregious and nefarious acts against innocent men, women and children who only wanted to live in peace. In my opinion, people like Khalil, whose only objective is to promote antisemitism and harming our Jewish friends and neighbors, should be deported. Frederick Bedell Jr. Advertisement Bellerose Khalil's justification for the savagery of Oct. 7 is only the tip of the iceberg. Those who applauded the rape and beheadings of innocents on Oct. 7 would also have proudly raised their fists in victory on 9/11. David Bryant Palm Desert, Calif. Advertisement Want to weigh in on today's stories? Send your thoughts (along with your full name and city of residence) to letters@ Letters are subject to editing for clarity, length, accuracy, and style.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store