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2,000-year-old Palmyra lion statue damaged by ISIS goes on display


DAMASCUS - A 2,000-year old statue badly damaged by Islamic State in Syria has gone on display in Damascus on Sunday after being restored.

The Lion of Al-Lat was one of several ancient monuments in Palmyra, the ancient city in central Syria which the jihadists have twice seized from government control during the six-year-long war.

The 15-ton statue was damaged by ISIS in 2015 during its first spell in control of Palmyra. It was moved to Damascus for restoration when Syrian government forces recovered the city with Russian military support in March, 2016.

The General Directorate of Antiquities and Museums in Syria present the statue of the Lion of Al-Lat, which dates back to the first century AD, to the public after its restoration at the National Museum in Damascus on October 1, 2017. LOUAI BESHARA/AFP
 

"It is an exceptional statue, there are no more such statues in Palmyra," said Bartosz Markowski, the Polish archaeologist who spent around two months restoring it. Around half the restored statue was original, he said.

"It was an internationally known symbol of Palmyra, it was standing in front of the museum. Every tourist visiting Palmyra and the museum had a photo with it," he said. The restoration was funded by the UN cultural agency UNESCO.

The statue, which is 345 centimeters (11 feet) high, was discovered at the temple of Al-Lat in Palmyra in 1977 by Polish archaeologists.

The statue will be on display at the National Museum of Damascus for the foreseeable future but may eventually be returned to its place in Palmyra, said Syrian antiquities director Mahmoud Hammoud.

ISIS also destroyed Palmyra's famous Triumphal Arch during its first spell in control of the city.

The terrorist group overran Palmyra for a second time in December, 2016. It destroyed parts of the Tetrapylon, a monument marking a bend in the ancient colonnade, and the facade of the second-century Roman Theater before it was driven from the city in March this year. — Reuters