| A local militia commander said: "One hundred percent has been destroyed" |
The scale of the damage done by
Islamic State militants to the ancient city of Nimrud is beginning to
emerge, two days after it was retaken by Iraqi forces.
| The city of Nimrud, about 32km south of Mosul, was founded more than 3,300 years ago |
| IS posted a video in April 2015 showing parts of Nimrud being blown up |
| The video also showed militants smashing artefacts with sledgehammers |
| IS considers pre-Islamic art and architecture as idolatrous |
| An AFP journalist holds up a photo showing what appears to be remains of a ziggurat that was once one of the tallest surviving structures from the ancient world |
| This photo shows the archway once guarded by two colossal statues of winged bulls |
| Unesco has denounced the destruction of Iraq's heritage as a "war crime" |
- The unrivalled riches of Nimrud
- Museum of Lost Objects: The Genie of Nimrud
- The men who uncovered Assyria
The city of Nimrud, about 32km (20 miles) south of Mosul, was founded more than 3,300 years ago. Then known as Kalhu, it was a capital of the Assyrian empire.
The site covered some 3.5 sq km (1.35 sq miles) and included a prominent "citadel" mound, the palaces and tombs of Assyrian kings, temples to their gods, colossal statues depicting lions and winged bulls, and widely revered frescos.
IS militants captured Nimrud in June 2014, shortly after they overran Mosul, routing the Iraqi army.
In March 2015, the Iraqi tourism ministry reported that militants had used bulldozers and other heavy vehicles to vandalise the site.
A month later, IS published a video showing militants smashing statues and frescos with sledgehammers before blowing up much of what remained.
On Tuesday, a pro-government tribal militia commander visiting the site for the first time in two years told the AFP news agency: "When you came here before, you could imagine the life as it used to be. Now there is nothing."
"One hundred percent has been destroyed," Ali al-Bayati added. "Losing Nimrud is more painful to me than even losing my own house."
The UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (Unesco) described the destruction of Nimrud last year as a "war crime", saying IS was "clearly determined to wipe out all traces of the history of Iraq's people".
The jihadist group has denounced pre-Islamic art and architecture as idolatrous, and has destroyed several other ancient sites in Iraq and neighbouring Syria.