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The blaze swept through the medieval market in Aleppo, Syria. Associated Press

Syrian fighting torches historic medieval market

The damage to one of the best-preserved old souks in the Middle East was the worst yet to a UNESCO World Heritage site in Syria.

A FIRE SPARKED by battles between Syrian President Bashar Assad’s troops and rebel fighters tore through Aleppo’s centuries-old covered market Saturday, burning wooden doors and scorching stone stalls and vaulted passageways.

The souk is one of a half-dozen renowned cultural sites in the country that have become collateral damage in the civil war.

The damage to one of the best-preserved old souks in the Middle East was the worst yet to a UNESCO World Heritage site in Syria. Across the country, looters have broken into a historic castle, stolen artefacts from museums and damaged ruins in the ancient city of Palmyra, antiquities officials and Syrian experts say.

The Aleppo market, a major tourist attraction with its narrow stone alleys and stores selling perfume, fabrics and spices, had been the site of occasional gun battles and shelling for weeks. But amateur video posted Saturday showed wall-to-wall flames engulfing wooden doors as burning debris fell away from the storefronts. Activists said hundreds of shops were affected.

“It’s a big loss and a tragedy that the old city has now been affected,” Kishore Rao, director of UNESCO’s World Heritage Center, told The Associated Press by telephone from Paris.

(Image: Associated Press)

Most of the other sites recognized as heritage sites by UNESCO, the global cultural agency, are also believed to have suffered damage during the 18-month battle to oust Assad, Rao said. The ancient centre of Aleppo — Syria’s largest city — has been hit the hardest, he said.

“It is a very difficult and tragic situation there,” said Ahmad al-Halabi, a local activist speaking by phone from the area. He said rebels and civilians were trying to control the blaze, but only had a few fire extinguishers.

The fire in the souk erupted late Friday and was still burning yesterday, following fierce fighting between regime troops and rebels trying to drive pro-Assad fighters out of the city of 3 million.

Decisive battle

On Thursday, rebels launched what they said would be a “decisive battle” for the city, followed by days of heavy fighting, including shelling and street combat. Amateur video has shown rebels taking cover behind walls and makeshift barriers, attacking regime forces with grenades and assault rifles. Activists reported heavy shelling by pro-Assad troops.

Once considered a bastion of support for Assad, Aleppo has become the focus of the insurgency for the last two months, with rebels taking about half the city. Aleppo would be a major strategic prize: A rebel victory would give Syria’s opposition a major stronghold near the Turkish border, while a regime victory would give Assad some breathing space.

It’s not clear what set off the fire in the old market, made of hundreds of stone stalls that line covered alleys with vaulted ceilings. Amateur footage posted online by activists showed flames engulfing the shops and rebels aiming a water hose at the fire. The shops’ wooden doors, along with the clothes, fabrics and inside some of the businesses, helped fuel the blaze, activists said.

The market stalls lie beneath the city’s towering 13th century citadel, where activists say regime troops and snipers have taken up positions.

The Syrian conflict has killed more than 30,000 people, according to activists. It has also wreaked widespread destruction, particularly in recent weeks as regime forces stepped up air strikes and shelling attacks, and rebels fired mortar shells and rocket-propelled grenades. Entire neighbourhoods in Syria’s three largest cities — Aleppo, the capital Damascus and Homs — have been devastated.

A majority of Syria’s 23 million people live in a thin western sliver of the country; in this territory, rebels have established positions in rural areas, while Assad’s forces are trying to hold on to the cities.

World Heritage site

Aleppo’s old centre was added in 1986 to UNESCO’s list of World Heritage sites. Of the medieval souks in the Middle East, Aleppo’s was among the best-preserved, offering visitors a range of architectural styles covering hundreds of years, said Rodrigo Martin, a Brussels expert on Syrian historical sites.

“It was a unique example of medieval commercial architecture,” said Martin, a spokesman for a group of experts who monitor damage to Syrian historical sites and cooperate with the U.N. cultural agency.

Some of the other prized cultural attractions have also suffered damage.

Earlier this year, looters broke into Crac des Chevaliers, one of the world’s best-preserved Crusader castles, a Syrian antiquities official said at the time. Shelling also damaged the site, said Martin, citing amateur video.

The ruins of the ancient city of Palmyra were damaged by fighting, Martin said, according to reports he received from Syria. He said he had seen video that showed sculptures being taken away from Palmyra in a small truck.

The other World Heritage sites on UNESCO’s list are the old centre of Damascus, one of the most ancient cities in the Middle East; the ancient city of Bosra, once the capital of the Roman province of Arabia; and a group of some 40 villages of north-western Syria that date from the first to seventh centuries.

Rao, the World Heritage chief, said the U.N. agency has asked Syria’s neighbours to be on the alert for attempts to smuggle looted objects out of the country. No incidents had been reported so far.

Lesser sites have also been affected in Syria. Regime shelling of neighbourhoods where the opposition is holed up has smashed historic mosques, churches and souks in the central Homs province and elsewhere in the country. Looters have stolen artefacts from museums.

Martin said the Syrian regime bears the bulk of the responsibility for the destruction because it signed international agreements to protect cultural sites.

For at least two millennia, cultural sites have been threatened or destroyed by wars throughout the Mideast, Martin said.

“History continues, whatever we do,” Martin said. “Mankind can just be really destructive”

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    Mute Kieran Byrne
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    Jan 5th 2023, 8:32 PM

    He’ll be out by the weekend.Otherwise the cartel will cause havoc.

    107
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    Mute SPQH
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    Jan 5th 2023, 11:49 PM

    @Kieran Byrne: did he really have much of a life choice though in fairness. Not condoning what he did but his life was kinda laid out for him.

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    Mute Declan Doherty
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    Jan 6th 2023, 12:12 AM

    Washington accuses the cartel of exploiting the opioid epidemic and introducing fentanyl yet they created the market with a series of laws making it near impossible for doctors to prescribe opioids. The rug was pulled from chronic pain patients and anyone with a prescription opioid addiction overnight. In the years following, the black market predictably exploded and just as predictably, so have the deaths which continue to rise year on year at a staggering rate. This is what happens when we create unregulated markets for criminals gangs to run and profit from. At some point we’re going to have to grow up and accept that the war on drugs is a failure on every conceivable level. Drugs won and huge numbers are dying while we wait for politicians to catch up. It’s obscene and it’s criminal.

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    Mute James Beattie
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    Jan 6th 2023, 9:36 AM

    @Declan Doherty: if you have not seen it, watch the Tv series ‘dopesick’ starring Michael Keaton. It is very good drama about opioid addiction

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    Mute Réamonn D'Arcy
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    Jan 6th 2023, 2:51 PM

    @James Beattie: Been meaning to watch it. Is it on Netflix?

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    Mute David cotter
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    Jan 5th 2023, 10:08 PM

    This war on drugs is lost……..let’s have limited legitimacy and put this cartels out a business..over to you joe,America are the main buyers legalisation has worked when tried.something has to be done to stop the 100,000 + death’s

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    Mute Ian James Burgess
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    Jan 5th 2023, 10:14 PM

    Arrest the rich who are using and you’ll stop the flow

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    Mute SPQH
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    Jan 6th 2023, 12:23 AM

    @Paul Gorry: what do you mean, arrest the middle class? Sounds like the new order put forth by Xi

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    Mute Tomaldo
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    Jan 5th 2023, 10:41 PM

    @Ian James Burgess, it would cost too much. I see Prince Harry admitted taking it, will he be arrested or locked up.

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    Mute SPQH
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    Jan 6th 2023, 12:27 AM

    @Tomaldo: nope, he’ll be applauded as the refreshing take on monarchy, even though we know he essentially supported criminals, yes folks everytime you buy cocaine I hate to tell you… But….

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    Mute Pete O'Reilly
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    Jan 5th 2023, 11:13 PM

    Getting murdered for not singing at The Mouses wedding!!!! What would he do to Daniel O’Donnell ?

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    Mute kevin mc cormack
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    Jan 5th 2023, 11:47 PM

    @Pete O’Reilly: ask him to fix his boiler

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    Mute Paul Gorry
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    Jan 6th 2023, 12:24 AM

    @kevin mc cormack: Daniel is not gas certified Kevin. Me granny only told me yesterday.

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    Mute Tomaldo
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    Jan 6th 2023, 12:38 AM

    @SPQH, then why not change the law?

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    Mute Tomaldo
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    Jan 6th 2023, 9:06 AM

    @Stephen Walshe, then he’ll be replaced by another smelly rat

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    Mute Stephen Walshe
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    Jan 6th 2023, 8:23 AM

    Smelly little rat got caught he should be hung in public.

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