"Islamic State" (IS) militants put at least 12 people to death in execution-style killings in the ancient city of Palmyra, which they re-captured from the government for a second time in December 2016, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported on Thursday.
The terrorist group beheaded four of the people — state employees and teachers — outside a museum, the group said. The eight others — four of them government soldiers and four of them rebel fighters captured elsewhere in Syria — were shot dead.
Some of the killings took place at an ancient Roman theater in Palmyra, where IS last year put at least 25 government fighters to death, the Observatory said.
Government forces and their militia allies, backed by Russian air power, had earlier taken the city back from IS in March, after first losing it in 2015. But IS has now captured Palmyra for a second time from the government at the end of last year.