Saudi
Strikes Kill Five Civilians, Destroy World Heritage Site in Yemeni
Capital
UNESCO
'Profoundly Distressed' by Attacks on Heritage Site
12
June, 2015
Recent
concerns about sites from antiquity being damaged in war have mostly
centered around ISIS occupations in Syria, but attention quickly
turned south today with news that the World Heritage Site in the
Yemeni capital of Sanaa was the target of multiple airstrikes.
UNESCO
director general Irina Bokova today said she was “profoundly
distressed”
by the news that one of the oldest urban landscapes in the region
came under fire from Saudi warplanes, and locals reported at least
five civilians who lived in the area around the ancient neighborhood
were killed.
Sanaa’s old
city dates
back 2,500 years, and is home to one of the oldest surviving mosques
in the world. The extent of the damage is unclear, but several locals
have released images showing some of the ancient buildings reduced to
rubble in the wake of the strike.
The extensive
damage will likely continue to grow in
the weeks and months to come, as most of the buildings in this
ancient neighborhood were cemented together, and the fall of some is
putting new pressure on the foundations of others, causing cracks
across the area.
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