Iraq jihadists blow up Muslim shrine in Mosul: official

Iraq jihadists blow up Muslim shrine in Mosul: official

MOSUL - Agence France-Presse
Iraq jihadists blow up Muslim shrine in Mosul: official

The revered Muslim shrine was destroyed on July 24 by militants who overran the city in June and imposed their harsh interpretation of Islamic law. AP Photo

The new jihadist rulers of Iraq's northern city of Mosul on Thursday completely levelled one its most well-known shrines, an official and witnesses told AFP.
      
The Nabi Yunus shrine was built on the reputed burial site of a prophet known in the Koran as Yunus and in the Bible as Jonah.
      
"Islamic State completely destroyed the shrine of Nabi Yunus after telling local families to stay away and closing the roads to a distance of 500 metres from the shrine," said the official at the Sunni endowment, which manages Sunni religious affairs in Iraq.
      
The endowment official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, and Mosul residents told AFP it took the Sunni extremists an hour to rig the shrine with explosives.
      
"They first stopped people from praying in it, they fixed explosive charges around and inside it and then blew it up in front of a large gathering of people," said a witness who did not wish to give his name.
      
The endowment official said the Islamic State jihadist group that overran large swathes of northern and western Iraq last month have now destroyed or damaged 30 shrines, as well as 15 husseiniyas and mosques in and around Mosul.
      
Husseiniyas are Shiite places of worship that are also used as community centres.
      
The official listed the most notable losses to Muslim heritage as being the shrines of Imam Yahya Ibn al-Qassem, Aoun al-Din and Nabi Danial.
      
"But the worst destruction was of Nabi Yunus, which has been turned to dust," he said.
      
The Islamic State late last month proclaimed a "caliphate" spanning parts of Iraq and Syria.        

The group aims to create an approximation of society as it was in the early days of Islam, which was founded in the 7th century, and considers Muslims who do not adhere to its puritanical version of the religion heretics.