About our Syria News
Latest news on Syria, with coverage of the transitional government, reconstruction, refugees, Kurdish rights, sanctions, the SDF, Damascus, Israel, and Turkey.
Syria has undergone a historic transformation since the fall of Bashar al-Assad's government in December 2024, ending more than five decades of Ba'athist rule. Ahmed al-Sharaa, the leader of Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), was declared transitional president in January 2025 and has overseen the formation of an interim government in Damascus. A provisional constitutional declaration concentrating executive authority was approved in March 2025, with a five-year transition roadmap envisaging a permanent constitution and elections by 2030. In October 2025, a 210-member People's Assembly was partly elected and partly appointed, marking Syria's first parliamentary process since Assad's ouster.
The status of northeast Syria remains a defining challenge. The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), which long controlled the governorates of Raqqa, Deir ez-Zor, and Al-Hasakah, reached a US-brokered ceasefire and integration agreement with the government following a military offensive in January 2026. Under its terms, the SDF is to integrate into state institutions, while the government has extended control over much of the northeast. A presidential decree recognised Kurdish identity and declared Kurdish a national language, though questions remain over whether constitutional protections and meaningful decentralisation will follow. Separately, Islamic State (ISIS/Daesh) remains a persistent security threat, with detained fighters held in camps now being transferred to Iraqi custody under US supervision.
Syria's humanitarian situation remains acute, with an estimated 16.5 million people in need of assistance. More than 1.5 million refugees have returned from neighbouring countries since December 2024, alongside nearly two million internally displaced people who have gone back to their areas of origin. However, millions of Syrians remain displaced abroad, principally in Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, and Egypt. Returnees face devastated infrastructure, limited access to clean water, electricity shortages, and widespread explosive ordnance contamination. The UN estimates Syria requires over $3 billion in humanitarian funding for 2026, while the World Bank has put reconstruction costs at upwards of $200 billion.
The repeal of the Caesar Act sanctions by the US Congress in December 2025, along with the easing of EU and UK sanctions, has been welcomed as a step toward economic recovery. Syria has re-engaged with the IMF and World Bank and rejoined the SWIFT international payments system. Investment in energy and infrastructure is beginning, though the economy remains shattered after more than a decade of war, with GDP having contracted by more than 80 per cent since 2010. Sectarian violence, including deadly clashes involving Druze and Sunni communities in Suwayda in 2025 that killed nearly 1,400 people, has underscored the fragility of the transition. Accountability for past atrocities under the Assad regime is being pursued through new transitional justice and missing persons commissions, as well as international mechanisms including the International Criminal Court.
Israel's military presence in southern Syria, including multiple bases established in the Golan Heights buffer zone and the Quneitra and Daraa governorates since December 2024, has drawn widespread international condemnation. The UN has criticised Israeli incursions as violations of the 1974 Disengagement Agreement, while Damascus has sought a negotiated withdrawal through US-mediated talks. Turkey, meanwhile, has backed a unified Syrian state and supported government efforts to integrate the SDF, while maintaining its own military presence along the northern border. The broader regional conflict between Israel, the United States, and Iran has further complicated Syria's recovery, with missile and drone debris causing civilian casualties in Syrian airspace.
Syria's story is shaped by more than a decade of civil war that began with pro-democracy protests in 2011 and escalated into a devastating conflict involving regional and global powers. The Assad regime's use of chemical weapons, the rise and fall of ISIS, and the displacement of more than 12 million people made Syria the world's largest refugee crisis. The country's rich cultural heritage, from the ancient ruins of Palmyra to the historic souks of Aleppo and Homs, suffered immense damage. Today, as Syrians cautiously rebuild, the interplay between political transition, economic reconstruction, and security challenges defines the path ahead.
Our Ðǿմ«Ã½ feed on Syria brings you comprehensive, up-to-date coverage from a wide range of reliable sources, spanning political developments in Damascus, the humanitarian crisis, refugee returns, reconstruction efforts, Kurdish and minority rights, and the actions of regional powers including Israel and Turkey. Whether you are following transitional justice efforts, security developments in northeast and southern Syria, or the broader implications of the post-Assad era, this feed is your essential resource for staying informed.