Citat:
Abu Ahmad, 40, fled the fighting between government and rebel forces in his village of Hish in southern Idilb province over a year ago. He found refuge at an archaeological site called Shinshrah, which is believed to be a village from the Roman era.
“My house was completely destroyed,” said Abu Ahmad. “I do not want to go to the humiliating refugee camps and I cannot afford high rents.”
Shinshrah is located in the Zawiya mountain range, one of about 40 Roman and Byzantine villages built in northern Syria between the first and seventh centuries AD.
UNESCO has classified these villages as world heritage sites and listed them among the places that are endangered by the Syrian civil war.
The ancient village of Shinshrah, which includes the remains of five churches, a number of palaces and around 100 houses, currently hosts over 100 displaced families from the southern part of Idlib province.
The new residents have been breaking the massive building blocks from ancient buildings into smaller stones that they sell or use to build huts roofed with tarpaulin. They have also destroyed the entrance of one of the churches, fearing that it might collapse and destroy their makeshift homes.
But the internally displaced persons (IDPs) are not the only ones to blame for the damage to the site.
On May 2, an airstrike by government forces killed a man and his two children and destroyed the whole of one ancient house as well as the wall of a church in Shinshrah. It is believed the planes were targeting a new IDP settlement located 500 metres from Shinshrah, mistaking it for a rebel camp.