“[He
was] a joyful guy. You had to see him if you went to Palmyra. He was a
guardian of the past,” a Lebanese archeologist, Joanne Farchakh,
recalled. “You felt his passion when he talked.”
The 82-year old was long retired, remaining at home when Isis
descended on Palmyra three months ago. What would the “Islamic
Caliphate” want with an old man steeped in antiquity? Certainly no tour
of the Roman forum and amphitheatre, the remains through which he walked
with countless foreign archeological teams over half a century,
ensuring – as Ms Farchakh said – “that they made no mistakes, didn’t get
the facts of history wrong”.

An image posted on an Isis affiliated website shows a militant smashing items from Palmyra (AP)
In truth, Mr al-Asaad knew that most of Palmyra’s movable artefacts
had long ago been taken to the comparative safety of Damascus (no one
could transport the entire Roman city away), but Isis believed he knew
where other treasures might have been buried.
After a month, the fighters realised that Mr al-Asaad knew nothing –
or would say nothing – and so they decapitated the old man and strung
his torso to a Roman pillar in the ancient city.
He had, in his long career as a civil servant, visited overseas
archeological conferences, and this alone would have merited a death
sentence in the eyes of his puritan torturers. If you work for the
Syrian government, in however lowly a role, you are a “regime man”.

The ancient Roman city of Palmyra, pictured earlier this summer (AP)
For months, Isis has operated an antiquities smuggling ring, selling
objects from Syria’s Roman past to international dealers, usually
through Turkey.
“Khaled al-Asaad was always there, and then he became a hostage,”
said Ms Farchakh. “The truth is that Palmyra is a hostage itself – to
two wars and to two political systems.”
Source:
The Telegraph – Robert Fisk
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