AIN DARA, Syria: For 3,000 years, the lion sculptures of Syria’s Ain Dara stood as testaments to the Iron Age. But as Turkish bombardment pounds the region, they have little left but their paws.
Syrian and Kurdish authorities have blamed the damage squarely on Ankara’s nearly two-week offensive on Afrin, a Kurdish-controlled pocket of northwest Syria that borders Turkey.
Perched on a hilltop in northern Syria, the neo-Hittite temple of Ain Dara dates back to the Aramaic era from around 1,300 to 700 BC, and is named after a village located in Afrin.
The identify of the deity worshipped there has not been officially determined, but one theory is that it is Ishtar, the deity of love.
Until last week, the temple stood as “one of the most important monuments built by the Aramaeans in Syria during the first millennium BC,” according to Syria’s department of antiquities.
But on Jan. 26, Turkish bombardment battered Ain Dara.
Today, visitors can barely make out the dark, engraved steps that once led into the temple but are now covered with rocks and debris.
And the frescoes of imposing winged animals carved in black basalt stone have been reduced to indistinguishable piles of rubble.
Only the temple’s rear section was spared, including a basalt sculpture of a lion standing guard, overlooking the green hills of Afrin.
“I was sitting right there,” said Ahmed Saleh, pointing to the steps of his home in the adjacent village of Ain Dara.
The elderly villager’s home directly faces the heritage site.
“The strike was so fierce that we were really shaken up. Then, the smoke began to rise up from the hill,” said Saleh, his head wrapped in the ubiquitous red-and-white checkered scarf of local residents.
Between 40 to 50 percent of the site was damaged, estimated Salah El-Din Senno, an archaeologist and member of Afrin’s local antiquities council.
Senno pointed to old photographs of the temple hung around the walls of his office.
“The damage began from the entrance and extended to the interior — the legendary animal statues, guardians of the temple, and other sculptures representing the gods were scattered” by the force of the blast, he said.
“Stone slabs were thrown a distance of 100 meters,” he told AFP.
temple.”
Speaking on condition of anonymity, a UNESCO official told AFP the Ain Dara temple had been special.
“The temple is an important example of Syro-Hittite religious architecture and the most extensively excavated structure of its kind in Syria,” said the official.
The bombardment caused “heavy damage to the central and southeastern portions of the building” and some features “have been blasted into fragments,” the official said.
UNESCO-listed heritage sites around the country have also been ravaged, including Aleppo’s celebrated Umayyad Mosque and the desert city of Palmyra.
Daesh group fighters deliberately destroyed the famed tower tombs in Palmyra, its statue of the Lion of Athena and the main Temple of Bel.
“Destroying the Ain Dara temple is the same level of atrocity as destroying the Temple of Bel,” said Syria’s former antiquities chief Maamun Abdulkarim.
“It is a catastrophe in all meanings of the word. Three thousand years of civilization destroyed in an airstrike,” Abdulkarim told AFP.
He also voiced concern for 40 old villages in Afrin, dubbed the “Ancient Villages of Northern Syria.”
According to the UNESCO, the villages date from the 1st to the 7th centuries and feature the remains of homes, pagan temples, churches and bathhouses.
Blown to bits, famed Syria temple falls victim to Turkey assault
Blown to bits, famed Syria temple falls victim to Turkey assault
Israeli police detain aide to Netanyahu
JERUSALEM: Israeli police said Sunday they detained a senior aide to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu suspected of obstructing an investigation, with local media reporting that it was tied to leaks of military information during the Gaza war.
Police did not name the individual, but Israeli media reported it was Tzachi Braverman, Netanyahu’s current chief of staff, who is designated to be Israel’s next ambassador to the UK.
“This morning, a senior official in the prime minister’s office was detained for questioning... on suspicion of obstructing an investigation,” the police said.
“The suspect... is currently being questioned under caution.”
Former Netanyahu aide Eli Feldstein recently alleged that Braverman tried to obstruct an investigation into a leak of sensitive military information to the foreign press during the war against Hamas in Gaza.
In September 2024, Feldstein leaked a classified document from the Israeli military to the German tabloid Bild, for which he was later arrested and indicted.
The document aimed to prove that Hamas was not interested in a ceasefire deal, and to support Netanyahu’s claim that the hostages captured by Palestinian militants in their October 7, 2023 assault on Israel could only be released through military pressure instead of negotiations.
In an interview with Israel’s public broadcaster KAN, Feldstein said Braverman asked to meet with him soon after the leak.
Braverman informed him that the army had launched a probe into the affair, and said he could “shut down” the investigation, according to Feldstein.
In the same interview, Feldstein said Netanyahu was aware of the leak and was in favor of using the document to drum up public support for the war.
Israeli media reported that police also searched Braverman’s home on Sunday, and that Feldstein was expected to speak with police later in the day regarding Braverman’s suspected involvement in the affair.
Feldstein is also a suspect in the so-called “Qatargate” scandal, in which he and other close associates of Netanyahu are suspected of having been recruited by Qatar to promote the Gulf monarchy’s image in Israel.
Qatar hosts senior Hamas leaders and has played a mediating role between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist movement during the war in Gaza.
An investigation is under way, and Feldstein, together with another Netanyahu aide, was taken into custody in late March.
In response to Braverman’s questioning by the police on Sunday, opposition leader Yair Lapid called to suspend his appointment as ambassador to the UK.
“In light of the new developments in the Qatargate affair, the appointment of Tzachi Braverman as ambassador to Britain must be immediately suspended,” Lapid wrote on X.
“It is unacceptable that someone suspected of involvement in obstructing a serious security investigation should be the face of Israel in one of the most important countries in Europe.”
Braverman is not suspected of direct involvement in the Qatargate affair, according to Israeli media.
Police did not name the individual, but Israeli media reported it was Tzachi Braverman, Netanyahu’s current chief of staff, who is designated to be Israel’s next ambassador to the UK.
“This morning, a senior official in the prime minister’s office was detained for questioning... on suspicion of obstructing an investigation,” the police said.
“The suspect... is currently being questioned under caution.”
Former Netanyahu aide Eli Feldstein recently alleged that Braverman tried to obstruct an investigation into a leak of sensitive military information to the foreign press during the war against Hamas in Gaza.
In September 2024, Feldstein leaked a classified document from the Israeli military to the German tabloid Bild, for which he was later arrested and indicted.
The document aimed to prove that Hamas was not interested in a ceasefire deal, and to support Netanyahu’s claim that the hostages captured by Palestinian militants in their October 7, 2023 assault on Israel could only be released through military pressure instead of negotiations.
In an interview with Israel’s public broadcaster KAN, Feldstein said Braverman asked to meet with him soon after the leak.
Braverman informed him that the army had launched a probe into the affair, and said he could “shut down” the investigation, according to Feldstein.
In the same interview, Feldstein said Netanyahu was aware of the leak and was in favor of using the document to drum up public support for the war.
Israeli media reported that police also searched Braverman’s home on Sunday, and that Feldstein was expected to speak with police later in the day regarding Braverman’s suspected involvement in the affair.
Feldstein is also a suspect in the so-called “Qatargate” scandal, in which he and other close associates of Netanyahu are suspected of having been recruited by Qatar to promote the Gulf monarchy’s image in Israel.
Qatar hosts senior Hamas leaders and has played a mediating role between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist movement during the war in Gaza.
An investigation is under way, and Feldstein, together with another Netanyahu aide, was taken into custody in late March.
In response to Braverman’s questioning by the police on Sunday, opposition leader Yair Lapid called to suspend his appointment as ambassador to the UK.
“In light of the new developments in the Qatargate affair, the appointment of Tzachi Braverman as ambassador to Britain must be immediately suspended,” Lapid wrote on X.
“It is unacceptable that someone suspected of involvement in obstructing a serious security investigation should be the face of Israel in one of the most important countries in Europe.”
Braverman is not suspected of direct involvement in the Qatargate affair, according to Israeli media.
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