Syria’s cultural heritage faces threats from conflict, neglect, and political shifts. Preservation efforts by UNESCO, local initiatives, and international programs highlight the need for cooperation.
Syria's new President Ahmed al-Sharaa met China's ambassador to Damascus in the first public engagement between the two ...
Syria's health-care system has undergone profound upheaval over the past decade, shaped by conflict, fragmentation, and now, a tenuous political transition. The acute conflict phase (2011–15) ...
Christians in northeast Syria this month will mark the 10th anniversary of an attack by the Islamic State group on more than ...
U.N. special envoy for Syria Geir Pedersen has said that formation of a "new inclusive government" in Damascus by March 1 ...
At the heart of transforming Syria must be the development and safeguarding of women’s rights. This will prove a revealing lens through which to measure the sincerity of HTS’s professed reforms.
The Syrian-American Jewish family returned for the first time since emigrating from Syria to the United States more than ...
The United States Ambassador to Nigeria, Richard Mills, has said there is no evidence that the USAID is funding Boko Haram ...
Richard Mills, the United States Ambassador to Nigeria has refuted allegation that the United States Agency for International ...
While condemning the atrocities of the Boko Haram terrorist groups, the US Mission to Nigeria stated that “comprehensive ...
I have just returned from a week in Syria with the British-Syrian diaspora, who have done much over the past 12 years to keep ...
Conflict and displacement have left much of Syria’s infrastructure in ruins. Entire towns are uninhabitable. Schools, hospitals, roads, water facilities, and electrical grids are damaged or destroyed.