BEIRUT, Lebanon – The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group has executed at least 217 people, including civilians, in and around the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra in the last nine days, a monitor said Sunday.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it had documented the executions of 67 civilians, including children, and 150 members of regime forces by ISIS jihadists in different parts of Homs province since May 16.
“The Observatory has confirmed that the Islamic State has executed 67 civilians, including 14 children and 12 women in Sukhnah, Al-Amiriyah, the outskirts of the Officers’ Housing and Palmyra,” said the Britain-based group, referring to several areas in the east of Homs province.
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“ISIS also executed more than 150 members of the army, National Defence Forces and Popular Committees (pro-regime militias) and others accused of being ‘informers loyal to the regime’,” the Observatory added.
Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman said whole families had been executed, including children along with their parents.
“Most of the deaths were in Palmyra, some of the executions were shootings, others were killed with knives and beheaded,” he told AFP.
The toll from the Observatory came hours after Syrian state media said ISIS had carried out a “massacre” in Palmyra, slaughtering some 400 civilians, mostly women and children.
The Observatory said the executions came in the days after ISIS began a sweep into Homs from their stronghold in neighbouring Deir Ezzor province.
They captured the strategic town of Sukhnah on May 13, and took Palmyra some 24 hours later, prompting international concern about the fate of the city’s famed ancient ruins.
Fighters entered the museum in the historic city and had placed guards at its doors, the country’s antiquities director said on Saturday, though most of its treasures were removed and brought to Damascus before ISIS cemented its control.
The Observatory said another 600 people had been taken prisoner by ISIS in their sweep through the area, among them regime forces and pro-government militants, but also civilians accused of ties to the regime.
Syria’s government labels all those fighting to oust President Bashar al-Assad “terrorists,” and has pointed to the emergence of ISIS and other jihadist groups as evidence that opponents of the regime are extremists.
Since the uprising against Assad began in March 2011 with peaceful protests, the government has lost more than three-quarters of the country’s territory.
More than 220,000 people have been killed in Syria’s conflict since March 2011.