Activists: Islamic State destroys temple at Syria's Palmyra

1Iraqi Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, right, welcomes his Norwegian counterpart Borge Brende before their joint press conference in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Aug. 23, 2015.
2Iraqi Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, right, meets with his Norwegian counterpart Borge Brende in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Aug. 23, 2015.
3FILE - This file photo released on Sunday, May 17, 2015, by the Syrian official news agency SANA, shows the general view of the ancient Roman city of Palmyra, northeast of Damascus, Syria.
4Activists say Islamic State militants have destroyed a temple at Syria's ancient ruins of Palmyra.
5News that the militants blew up the Baalshamin Temple (not pictured) came after the extremists beheaded Palmyra scholar Khaled al-Asaad on Tuesday, hanging his bloodied body from a pole in the town's main square.
6News that the militants blew up the Baalshamin Temple came after the extremists beheaded Palmyra scholar Khaled al-Asaad on Tuesday, hanging his bloodied body from a pole in the town's main square.
7Islamic State militants have destroyed a temple at Syria's ancient ruins of Palmyra, activists said Sunday, realizing the worst fears archaeologists had for the 2,000-year-old Roman-era city after the extremists seized it and beheaded a local scholar.
8Palmyra, one of the Middle East's most spectacular archaeological sites and a UNESCO World Heritage site, sits near the modern Syrian city of the same name.
9Activists said the militants used explosives to blow up the Baalshamin Temple on its grounds, the blast so powerful it also damaged some of the Roman columns around it.
10The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Sunday night that the temple was blown up a month ago.
11Turkey-based activist Osama al-Khatib, who is originally from Palmyra, said the temple was blown up Sunday.
12Both said the extremists used a large amount of explosives to destroy it.
13Both activists relied on information for those still in Palmyra and the discrepancy in their accounts could not be immediately reconciled, though such contradictory information is common in Syria's long civil war.
14The fate of the nearby Temple of Bel, dedicated to the Semitic god Bel, was not immediately known.
15Islamic State group supporters on social media also did not immediately mention the temple's destruction.
16The Sunni extremists, who have imposed a violent interpretation of Islamic law across their self-declared "caliphate" in territory they control in Syria and Iraq, claim ancient relics promote idolatry and say they are destroying them as part of their purge of paganism.
17However, they are also believed to sell off looted antiquities, bringing in significant sums of cash.
18The temple dates to the first century and is dedicated to the Phoenician god of storms and fertilizing rains.
19The head of UNESCO, Irina Bokova, said Friday that Islamic State extremists in Syria and Iraq are engaged in the "most brutal, systematic" destruction of ancient sites since World War II - a stark warning that came hours after militants demolished the St. Elian Monastery, which housed a fifth-century tomb and served as a major pilgrimage site.
20The monastery was in the town of Qaryatain in central Syria.
21News of the temples destruction comes after relatives and witnesses said Wednesday that Khaled al-Asaad, an 81-year-old antiquities scholar who devoted his life to understanding Palmyra, was beheaded by Islamic State militants, his bloodied body hung on a pole.
22He even had named his daughter after Zenobia, the queen that ruled from the city 1,700 years ago.
23Meanwhile in Iraq, at least 23 soldiers and government-allied militiamen were killed Sunday in an attack by Islamic State militants in the turbulent Anbar province west of Baghdad, Iraqi military and police officials said, in the second heavy death toll suffered by the Iraqi military and its allies in recent days in the vast Sunni region.
24The officials said Sunday's attack, which killed 17 soldiers and six Sunni militia fighters, took place in the rural district of Jaramshah, north of Anbar's provincial capital, Ramadi.
25The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to journalists.
26They said the Islamic State fighters used suicide bombings and mortar shells and that chief of army operations in Anbar, Maj-Gen. Qassim al-Dulaimi, was lightly wounded in the attack.
27News of Sunday's attack came two days after up to 50 soldiers were killed by the Islamic State group in two ambushes elsewhere in Anbar province, much of which is under militant control, including Ramadi and the key city of Fallujah.
28Government forces and allied Sunni and Shiite militiamen have been battling the Islamic State militants in Anbar for months, but, hampered by suicide bombings and booby-trapped buildings, they have only made modest gains.