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Syrian opposition

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  • Displaced Syrian man Walid Muhammad Abdel-Baqi shows pictures of his dead son Walid on his phone
    Syrians in Lebanon

    Not safe to stay, not safe to go home

    Desperate Syrians are weighing up whether to stay in an increasingly hostile Lebanon or risk a precarious existence in areas held by the Syrian opposition. The return journey is deadly and conditions in Syria are tough

  • Protesters waving flags and banners
    Islamists in Idlib

    Syrian protesters rise up against Hayat Tahrir al-Sham

    Opponents of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad seeking refuge in Idlib are now protesting against local Islamist hardliners Hayat Tahrir al-Sham. The group is accused of becoming increasingly dictatorial

  • During the day, Syria Street is one of Tripoli's main thoroughfares
    Lebanon's Tripoli

    Old wounds and new problems on "Syria Street"

    Syria Street in Tripoli, Lebanon's second-largest city, was a microcosm of the Syrian Civil War for many years. Nowadays, a fragile calm hides the complexities of Lebanon's past and the resilience of its people

  • Protesters hold up placards and wave Druze flags, Sweida city, Syria, 27 August 2023
    Anti-Assad protests in Syria's Sweida governate

    New wave of violence after protester death?

    Locals in southern Syria have been protesting peacefully for months now, despite their government's brutal crackdown. But in late February, for the first time, a demonstrator was killed

  • Children and their teacher in a Turkish primary school classroom
    Refugees

    Battling public mood, Turkey quietly assimilates Syrians

    Mahmud Abdi came to Turkey hoping to return once the bloodshed ebbed. Almost a decade later, the 30-year-old carpenter is looking to open his own workshop in the southeastern Turkish city of Sanliurfa, where a quarter of the two million inhabitants are Syrian

  • Syrian literature

    Acclaimed writer Khaled Khalifa dies aged 59

    Award-winning author, poet and screenwriter Khaled Khalifa has died at his home in Damascus. Although one of his country's most celebrated writers, his novels were banned in Syria

  • A decade of appalling civil war has left Syria fragmented and in ruins, but one thing crosses every front line: a drug called captagon.
    Trading in amphetamines

    How Syria became a narco state

    Captagon is now Syria's biggest export by far, dwarfing all its legal exports put together, according to estimates drawn from official data. An amphetamine derived from a once-legal treatment for narcolepsy and attention deficit disorder, it has become a huge drug in the Gulf, with Saudi Arabia by far the biggest market

  • If nothing else, the popular religious discourse in the aftermath of the earthquake reveals yet again that institutional reform in Arab countries is long overdue. Those voices that value humanity over religious polarisation deserve our unconditional support.
    Turkey-Syria earthquake

    Polarising religious narratives

    Religious discussions on the causes and aftermath of the earthquake disaster in Turkey and Syria have dominated Arab discourse recently, revealing the urgent need to support marginalised, humanist religious voices and those placing the human above polarisation and the instrumentalisation of events. By Mustafa Karahamad

  • For women in northwestern Syria, the aftermath of the February 6 earthquakes has deepened the trauma of 12 years of war.
    Syria earthquake aftermath

    Life is a whole lot worse for women

    For women in northwestern Syria, the aftermath of the February 6 earthquakes has deepened the trauma of 12 years of war. By Diana Hodali

  • On social media, calls to lift sanctions on Syria and expedite earthquake aid have gone viral. But are such calls genuine?
    Earthquake politics

    Syria – do EU, U.S. sanctions stop aid deliveries?

    On social media, calls to lift sanctions on Syria and expedite earthquake aid recently went viral. But are such calls genuine, or are they part of a cynical campaign to further Bashar al-Assad's rehabilitation on the international stage? By Cathrin Schaer

  • Videos from cities near the epicentre have captured a devastating form of collapse some call "pancaking" – this happens when an entire building falls, each storey collapsing one on top of the other. The chance of survival for someone in a pancaked building is slim.
    Turkey-Syria quake

    Weak buildings, shallow shock caused deaths

    The instability of old buildings was responsible for much of the wreckage in Monday’s earthquake along the Turkey-Syria border. But the earthquake was also abnormally strong for its magnitude. Clare Roth has the details

  • In this virtually cut-off region of northwestern Syria, morgues have become overcrowded and equipment is hard to come by.
    France24 earthquake report

    In Syria’s rebel zones, volunteers dig mass graves

    As rescue workers continued to search for survivors of the earthquake that happened on 6 February, residents of Syria’s northwestern opposition-controlled territories were forced to start digging mass graves to bury victims

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