In their latest act of vandalism, the Islamic State militants have blown up the ancient city of Nimrud as a part of their "cultural cleansing" of Iraq and Syria as reported in news.sky.com dated 12 April 2015. But – what will they replace it with? Do they have any plan to build another city which people thousand years hence would boast about?
To confirm their misdeed, they have posted a video online which apparently shows the terror group's fighters smashing artefacts at the 3,000-year-old site near Mosul in northern Iraq. In the video can be seen militants with large barrels of powder in a room lined with gypsum slabs, beautifully carved with representations of Assyrian figures.
As far as history of Mesopotamia goes, Nimrud was founded in the 13th century BC and contains one of the most famous archaeological sites in a country which has been dubbed to be the cradle of civilization. Due to its importance, it was on UNESCO's tentative list of world heritage sites.
During the destruction, there was a huge explosion and then, IS fighters hacked away at the statues with sledgehammers and carved them up with angle grinders.
In the opinion of Middle East expert Professor Fawaz Gerges, from the London School of Economics, the Islamic State is a "social epidemic" that is "culturally cleansing" an area the size of the UK and the video now released should be seen as a "powerful propaganda tool" to counter set-backs they are facing on the battlefield.
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