Photos Emerge of the Islamic State's Destruction of Palmyra Temple
Irina Bokova, director-general of UNESCO, said the "true intent of such attacks" was to "deprive the Syrian people of its knowledge, its identity and history."
"One week after the killing of Professor Khaled al-Assaad, the archaeologist who had looked after Palmyra's ruins for four decades, this destruction is a new war crime and an immense loss for the Syrian people and for humanity," she added.
News that the jihadists detonated explosives in the UNESCO-listed site's Baal Shamin temple emerged on Sunday, causing significant damage to its interior and collapsing some of its columns, Syrian Antiquities and Museums Department head Maamoun Abdulkarim told a number of media outlets, including the state-run SANA news agency.
The group seized Palmyra from government forces in May, prompting fears for the two millennia old Roman-era ruins on the modern town's outskirts, as well as antiquities displayed in its museum. IS enforces an extreme interpretation of Islamic law in its self-styled "caliphate" and brands statues and other historical artifacts as idolatrous.
VICE News' John Beck contributed to this report.
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