Video shows Islamic State smashing ancient Iraq city. Real or fake?

Another ancient city has fallen into the destructive hands of the Islamic State.

A new video, uploaded April 3, appears to show militants smashing walls with sledgehammers and firing at statues with AK-47s in the ancient Iraq city of Hatra, a UNESCO world heritage site.

The footage reveals the extremist groups latest efforts in its purge of Iraq and Syrias cultural heritage particularly ancient relics that the group regards as false idols, based on their strict interpretation of Islamic law.

Running just over seven minutes, the video includes aerial scenes of the site and footage of militants taking hammer, pickaxe, and gun to 2,000-year-old statues and carvings, all to the sound of militaristic musical scoring. One jihadist, speaking Arabic with a Gulf accent, said they destroyed the site because it is worshipped instead of God, according to The Associated Press.

The video supports a previous AP report,which said that residents living near Hatra, located some 290 kilometers northwest of Baghdad, heard large explosions and saw bulldozers razing the site.

Once a large fortified city under the rule of the Parthian Empire, Hatra was the capital of the first Arab kingdom and withstood Roman invasions in 198 and 116 AD, according to UNESCO. Its destruction represents the latest Islamic State attack against the regions cultural heritage attacks that UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokov has denounced as war crimes.

[N]othing is safe from the cultural cleansing underway in the country: it targets human lives, minorities, and is marked by the systematic destruction of humanitys ancient heritage,"Ms. Bokov said in a statement released in early March.

Bokov's reaction echoes that of archeologists, historians, and others who in the last few months have condemned videos showing Islamic State, or ISIS, crushing ancient artifacts, many of them in Mosul. But reports have surfaced that at least some of the relics the militants destroyed were actually copies: For instance, a number of statues and idols in the Mosul Museum, which ISIS targeted in February, were exact replicas of originals found in Baghdad, Deutsche Welle reported. In some cases, the artifacts were not destroyed but stolen and sold in the black market to help fund ISIS, the German publication continued.

That isn't to say the militants didn't manage to destroy any originals, the report noted. And in sabotaging the record of Iraqs past, ISIS is causing great damage to human history as a whole, Cornell University'sDirector of the Institute of Archaeology and Material StudiesSturt Manning wrote.

The smashed artifacts ... are the material record of humanity, Professor Manning explained in a CNN op-ed. They are not just for scholars, they are for everyone. They are the text of the past that helps define our future.

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Video shows Islamic State smashing ancient Iraq city. Real or fake?

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