Dec 31, 2016
NIMRUD, Iraq
(AP) -- The chilly December wind whipped rain across the strewn
wreckage of a city that, nearly 3,000 years ago, ruled almost the entire
Middle East. Rivulets of water ran through the dirt, washing away
chunks of ancient stone.
The city of Nimrud in
northern Iraq is in pieces, victim of the Islamic State group's fervor
to erase history. The remains of its palaces and temples, once lined in
brilliant reliefs of gods and kings, have been blown up. The statues of winged bulls that once guarded the site are hacked to bits. Its towering ziggurat, or step pyramid, has been bulldozed.
The
militants' fanaticism devastated one of the Middle East's most
important archaeological sites. But more than a month after the
militants were driven out, Nimrud is still being ravaged, its treasures
disappearing, imperiling any chance of eventually rebuilding it, an
Associated Press team found after multiple visits in the past month.
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