An NPR investigation finds that more than 350 Syrian children were secretly placed in orphanages across the capital, Damascus, when the Assad regime was in power. Now, some of them cannot be found.
Syria’s interim government has announced the end of a days-long military operation against insurgents loyal to ousted ...
This past weekend’s sectarian violence was possibly among the bloodiest 72 hours in the modern history of Syria after 14 ...
Syrian families who fled the clashes in Syria hold their luggages as they cross a river marking the border between Syria and northern Lebanon near the village of Heker al-Daher in Akkar province, ...
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The National on MSNMore than 130 killed as Syrian government forces and pro-Assad militias clashSyrian security forces fought with Al Assad loyalists for a second day in the country's coastal region on Friday, as the Islamist-led government sought to quell the deadliest unrest since the fall of ...
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The clashes, which erupted Thursday, marked a major escalation in the challenge to the new government in Damascus, three ...
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ABP News on MSNDeath Toll Rises To 1,000 After Syrian Security Forces & Assad Loyalists Engage In Fierce ClashesAfter two days of clashes between Syrian security forces and loyalists of ousted President Bashar Assad and the revenge ...
A Syrian war monitor says the death toll from two days of clashes between security forces and loyalists to ousted Syrian ...
More Than 1,000 Syrians Died in Airport Prison Under Assad, Report Says (Refiles to fix typo 'imagery' in first bullet point) By Reade Levinson and Feras Dalatey DAMASCUS (Reuters) - More than ...
The national dialogue, organized by Syria's new leadership, aimed to outline the country's political roadmap following the ousting of former president Bashar al-Assad in December 2024. The dialogue's ...
The Assad regime also besieged the city while bombarding ... as rallies across Syria marked 30 years since the massacre [AFP] The young men in the photos have contemporary hairstyles and clothing ...
Comics had already been trying to foster stand-up in Syria before Bashar al-Assad’s fall. Now, they are telling jokes in a liberated country, while warily eyeing the new government. By Raja ...
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