Shocking new details emerge of ISIS massacre in Syria

Shocking new details have emerged of an ISIS massacre in a Syrian town where 128 were slaughtered and dumped in the streets in a matter of days.

Terrified residents say children were butchered with knives and women were burned or had their arms broken by extremists after they raided the war torn Qaryatayn community.

Bodies of many of the victims were deliberately left out in the open, piled up in ditches or abandoned on farmland by bloodthirsty fanatics who then fled after being driven out by Syrian forces after a three-week occupation. Families were barred from burying their loved ones.

Many were beheaded or shot while the militants, who had arrived with a hit list, forced people to look at bodies to strike fear into the town.

Shocking new details have emerged of an ISIS massacre in a Syrian town where 128 were slaughtered and dumped in the streets in a matter of days. Pictures show some of the victims covered in blankets

Terrified residents say children were butchered with knives and women were burned or had their arms broken by extremists after they raided the war torn Qaryatayn community

Terrified residents say children were butchered with knives and women were burned or had their arms broken by extremists after they raided the war torn Qaryatayn community

ISIS scrawled slogans on walls and shop shutters in the town during their three-week occcupation. Many victims were beheaded or shot while townsfolk were marched off and forced to look at mass graves created by militants who had come to the town with a hit list

ISIS scrawled slogans on walls and shop shutters in the town during their three-week occcupation. Many victims were beheaded or shot while townsfolk were marched off and forced to look at mass graves created by militants who had come to the town with a hit list

ISIS had stormed the town early in October. By the time they left the town three weeks later, scores of civilians had been executed, apparently in revenge for being linked to the Syrian regime. 

Many of the slayings are understood to have taken place in the last 48 hours before they fled.

The killings underscore the ability of the group to inflict heavy losses even when in retreat – and portend more violence as they fight to hang on to their last strongholds in Syria.

News of the massacre began to emerge late on Sunday, after the ISIS death squad had been driven out by advancing government troops.

Terrified residents said they watched the slaughter from their windows or in the streets.

One former resident said his surviving family members walked for miles to find cell phone coverage so they could tell him of the deaths of his uncle, two cousins and a fourth relative. Another uncle remains missing.

The massacre happened over a three-week period in the town of Qaryatayn, north of Damascus

The massacre happened over a three-week period in the town of Qaryatayn, north of Damascus

 About 200 militants evacuated the town, before government forces (pictured) marched in to retake the town

 About 200 militants evacuated the town, before government forces (pictured) marched in to retake the town

‘They came into town with a hit list,’ said Abdullah AbdulKarim, adding that 35 of the 50 militants who overran the town late last month were originally from Qaryatayn. He said the militants accused many of their victims of collaborating with the government but many others were also caught in the revenge killing.

‘Our curse is from within us,’ he said, speaking to The Associated Press from northern Syria, where he fled years ago.

Once a predominantly Christian town known for its ancient monastery, Qaryatayn has changed hands between ISIS and the Syrian government several times during Syria’s civil war. Parts of the 1,500-year-old St. Elian monastery were demolished the first time ISIS took over the town in 2015 and thousands of its Christian residents fled, fearing the extremist group’s brutality.

Video captured as Syrian government troops recaptured Qaryatayn on Saturday, showed several bodies lying in the streets. In the video, a town resident said ISIS ‘monsters’ killed more than 100 people, including soldiers and civilians.

‘These are people who don’t know God, they don’t know anything. They killed children and women with knives, they beat women, broke their arms,’ he said, speaking on condition of anonymity out of fear for his own safety.

News of the massacre began to emerge late on Sunday, after the ISIS death squad had been driven out by advancing government troops

News of the massacre began to emerge late on Sunday, after the ISIS death squad had been driven out by advancing government troops

The killings underscore the ability of the group to inflict heavy losses even when in retreat - and portend more violence as they fight to hang on to their last strongholds in Syria

The killings underscore the ability of the group to inflict heavy losses even when in retreat – and portend more violence as they fight to hang on to their last strongholds in Syria

Terrified residents said they watched the slaughter from their windows or in the streets

Terrified residents said they watched the slaughter from their windows or in the streets

One reside said: ‘They attacked us like animals, they came to kill us.

‘They broke the arms of the women, they burned them, they killed various women.

‘They killed more than a hundred innocent people from the families of both civilians and militants.’

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it had documented the killings of at least 128 people in Qaryatayn, including at least 12 killed by government forces on suspicion of aiding the ISIS militants.

AbdulKarim and Mohamed Hassan, an activist who runs the Palmyra Network News, put the death toll at 75 civilians, saying many more remain unaccounted for.

‘It seems it was mostly revenge,’ Hassan said.

Another activist network, the Palmyra Coordination Committee, released the names of 67 civilians who were confirmed killed and said the number was likely to rise. It said at least 35 of the dead were found dumped inside a ditch.

Talal Barazi, the governor of Homs province, said ISIS ‘terrorised’ residents for three weeks, adding that most of the dead were townspeople who were government employees or were affiliated with Syria’s ruling Baath party.

He said at least 13 residents remained missing and six bodies had not been identified.

ISIS militants relied on Qaryatayn's strategic location to defend another of their bastions, the historic city of Palmyra. Government troops are pictured after recapturing the town

ISIS militants relied on Qaryatayn’s strategic location to defend another of their bastions, the historic city of Palmyra. Government troops are pictured after recapturing the town

Two Syrian soldiers walk the street of Qaryatayn, a town in central Syria which was recaptured from ISIS militants on Saturday

Two Syrian soldiers walk the street of Qaryatayn, a town in central Syria which was recaptured from ISIS militants on Saturday

ISIS militants relied on Qaryatayn’s strategic location to defend another of their bastions, the historic city of Palmyra. With Russian backing, Syrian government troops regained control of Qaryatayn in April 2016. But ISIS, facing major setbacks in Syria and Iraq, launched a new offensive on the town in late September and recaptured it.

AbdulKarim said during the three weeks that ISIS controlled the town, the militants went door to door looking for people they accused of collaborating with the Syrian government.

He said his uncle, who was a local mayor, and two cousins were shot after they were taken to an undisclosed location.

‘They took people to show them bodies dumped in an open area to let them know they were killed, but also to terrorise the public,’ AbdulKarim said. He said the extremists barred residents from burying their dead.

He said the advancing government troops also killed civilians, but residents were too afraid to report the government killings.

AbdulKarim and the Observatory said the militants took Qaryatayn’s police chief, his wife and other security personnel as hostages to negotiate their exit after government troops encircled the town. About 200 militants evacuated the town, before government forces marched in, they said.

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk