Comment on:Daesh beheads top archeologist in Syria’s Palmyra
Daesh beheads top archeologist in Syria’s Palmyra
The unholy sacrilegious militant groups operate as per their miserable Controllers' guidance and orders .The real Doers are the Controllers!And yet again, they are not!They have already run out of their batteries' stale, decomposed, rotten liquids; they just do not fully realize it, as yet.
YOU, CONTROLLERS! just collect the 'remains of your day' and liquids and be gone!
The Time has come that the True Dreams -not the ones you technologically, mechanically, malevolently funneled US with and sickened OUR life and soul- gain peacefully their way back in OUR hearts; In a huge, glorious triumph our True Dreams are coming True!
Leave US now ! We saw your I.D. cards, your visiting cards. We saw your values without prejudice and they are not HUMAN.You are transparent to our eyes .Your secret plans and movements are immediately monitored and observed. Be it in the international arena or in the small township of Gastouni, in Greece's Peloponese, we feel your 'ways and means' as they manifest on the every 3D moment's actuality. No hiding place for them in OUR consciousness.
They are not made to OUR standards.We have no more use for you! Just be gone!!! ΓΕΝΟΙΤΟ!
m.l.p.
Wed Aug 19, 2015 8:41AM
Slain Syrian antiquities scholar Khaled Assad
Members
of the Takfiri Daesh militant group have decapitated a leading
antiquities scholar in Syria’s ancient central city of Palmyra, and
later hung his body from a column in the main square of the city.
Daesh
extremists beheaded 81-year-old Khaled Asaad, who worked for more than
50 years as head of antiquities in Palmyra, on Tuesday.
Maamoun
Abdulkarim, the Syrian state antiquities chief, said Daesh militants
detained Asaad over a month ago, and interrogated him to obtain
information about treasures in Palmyra, located 215 kilometers (133
miles) northeast of the capital, Damascus, but all to no avail.
Asaad
had reportedly published several scholarly articles on Palmyra in
international archaeological journals. He had also worked with the US,
French, German and Swiss archaeologists over the past few decades on
excavations and research in Palmyra’s historic sites, including
2,000-year-old Roman tombs as well as the Temple of Bel.
This file photo shows a part of the Roman structures in the central Syrian city of Palmyra. Daesh
took control of Palmyra, which is on the list of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)’s World
Heritage Sites on May 21.Palmyra and Tadmur, the modern town that
adjoins it, have been the scene of recent fighting between Syrian
government troops and ISIL militants. Multiple news reports say
government troops left the city ahead of an advance by the terrorists.
UNESCO has appealed to Syria’s warring factions to “make every effort to prevent” Palmyra’s destruction.
The famous Lion of al-Lat statue outside the museum in the central Syrian city of Palmyra (file photo)
On
July 2, Daesh Takfiris destroyed the renowned statue of Lion of al-Lat,
which was a matchless piece of art three meters (10 feet) tall and
weighing 15 tons, outside the Palmyra museum.
The conflict in Syria, which started in March 2011, has reportedly claimed more than 240,000 lives up until now.
The
violence has also forced over four million Syrians to take refuge in
neighboring countries, namely Jordan and Lebanon. More than 7.2 million
others have been displaced within Syria, according to the UN. On
March 4, Iraqi officials announced that Daesh Takfiri militants had
“bulldozed” the ancient Assyrian city of Nimrud located south of Iraq’s
conflict-ridden northern city of Mosul. "I condemn with the strongest
force the destruction of the site at Nimrud," said Irina Bokova, the
UNESCO head, the next day, adding, "We cannot stay silent. The
deliberate destruction of cultural heritage constitutes a war crime,
and I call on all political and religious leaders in the region to stand
up against this new barbarity."