For minority groups in the northeast, the fragile ceasefire comes with more profound questions over their future in Syria.
Foreign women linked to the Islamic State group in a Syrian camp are hoping for amnesty after a government offensive weakened the Kurdish-led forces guarding them.
This is the second time that President Vladimir V. Putin has hosted President Ahmed al-Sharaa since the fall of the Russia-backed Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad.
For nearly a decade they existed in legal limbo. The Kurds could not try them, nor would they free them. Most Western governments, despite American pressure, refused to take their citizens back. But ...
CNN visits Al-Roj camp, a detention center in northeastern Syria where more than 2,000 women and children (though some are no longer children) have been held – some for more than a decade – by the ...
AL-Monitor is an award-winning media outlet covering the Middle East, valued for its independence, diversity and analysis. It ...
Tribes played a key role in military operations against the SDF, and their loyalty could prove vital to the future of statebuilding in Syria ...
Among the ruins of one of Syria’s largest refugee camps, life cautiously returns as families face cold, debris, and the ...