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IS Beheaded Palmyra Scholar Asaad Because He Refused To Betray His City


Syrian antiquities scholar Khalid al-Asaad was killed by Islamic State militants in Palmyra, for various "crimes," including acting as director of "idolatry" in the ancient city.
Syrian antiquities scholar Khalid al-Asaad was killed by Islamic State militants in Palmyra, for various "crimes," including acting as director of "idolatry" in the ancient city.

An 83-year-old antiquities scholar beheaded by the Islamic State (IS) militant group in Palmyra this month was murdered because he would not betray the city to which he devoted his life, his friends and relatives say.

Khalid al-Asaad, who retired a decade ago, was abducted and held captive by IS militants for about a month before being brutally killed in public on August 18.

Those who knew Asaad and who spoke to him before IS held him captive say that IS gunmen killed the octogenarian because he refused to give them information about the location of Palmyra's most valuable treasures.

Asaad would spend his days in Palmyra, walking there every day from his home in the new city of Tadmur, according to one Palmyra resident, Abu Ahmad, who said he knew Asaad for at least 15 years.

Abu Ahmad, who has since fled Palmyra, says he last saw Asaad on June 13.

The elderly scholar said he had been questioned by IS gunmen, his friend said.

"He told me he was summoned by IS, who wanted him to reveal where the most precious artifacts are hidden," Abu Ahmad told RFE/RL.

"He knew they would kill him but he said, 'I'm not going to leave the city. I'm staying.'"

Abu Ahmad's name, like those of other Syrians interviewed for this story, has been changed for security reasons.

Khalil al-Hariri, a relative of Asaad, said that the scholar's deep connections with "every artifact and every stone" in Palmyra meant he would not abandon his home.

"Asaad refused to leave the city, although he was aware of the danger he was facing," Hariri told RFE/RL.

'Infidels' And 'Idolatry'

Asaad had been held by IS for about a month, friends and activists say, before the militants killed him on August 18.

"They brought him to the square in a black van, then used loudspeakers to call for people to come and watch the execution," Palmyra resident Abu Mohammed al-Tadmuri told RFE/RL by Whatsapp after news of Asaad's killing broke.

More than 150 people, including women and children, watched as IS militants read out their decision to "execute" Asaad, according to Tadmuri.

In front of the crowd, a masked militant beheaded the octogenarian scholar with a sword.

"His body was left on the ground for more than six hours, from 11 a.m. until after five o'clock in the evening," Tadmuri said.

"After that, they strung up his body on a pole."

A graphic photograph shared by IS accounts on social media purported to show Asaad's bloodied and headless body hung by an orange rope on what looks like a traffic light by a road. The elderly man's head, its spectacles still intact, had been placed on the ground between his feet.

A handwritten placard tied to the body identified the victim as "the apostate Khalid Muhammad al-Asaad" and accused him of being loyal to the "Nusayri regime," a derogatory term for the Alawite government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

According to Arabic media reports, the placard listed five "crimes" that IS deemed Asaad to have committed, including acting as a representative of Syria at "infidel conferences," acting as director of "idolatry" in Palmyra, and visiting Iran.

'We Should Not Remain Silent'

Pro-government and opposition figures, activists, and thinkers were unanimous in condemning IS's slaying of Asaad.

Asaad's successor, current director of the General Department of Antiquities and Museums Maamun Abdul-Karim, told SANA that IS had murdered the elderly scholar "in cold blood."

Samah Hadaya, the minister of culture in the Syrian Interim Government, an alternative government body formed by the opposition National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, also slammed Asaad's murder.

IS's killing of Asaad was "aimed at killing civilization, modernity, and all of humanity," Syrian philosopher and thinker Ahmed Barqawi said.

"Don’t tell me that we shouldn't focus on the killing of a scholar... because the Assad regime has already killed thousands of people," Barqawi wrote on his Facebook page on August 19.

"Yes, the regime committed unprecedented hideous crimes and atrocities but we should not remain silent because of the crimes of IS."

PHOTO GALLERY: Ancient Palmyra Threatened By IS Militants

Asaad had devoted his life to studying Palmyra's treasures. He headed the Palmyra Antiquities Department and Museums from 1963 until his retirement in 2003, and even after he retired he stayed on as an expert, according to Syrian state news agency SANA.

The scholar was a member of the ruling Baath Party, a fact that would certainly have helped his career. But the mark that he made on the world of archaeology was undeniable.

As UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova put it, IS "murdered a great man, but they will never silence history."

About This Blog

"Under The Black Flag" provides news, opinion, and analysis about the impact of the Islamic State (IS) extremist group in Syria, Iraq, and beyond. It focuses not only on the fight against terrorist groups in the Middle East, but also on the implications for the region and the world.

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