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Assaf Mohammad Dahmash, a Bedouin man at a displacement centre, said he would never return to Sweida, a place he had called home since 2016 when he fled from ISIS in Deir Ezzor.
The prime minister of Iraq has kept his country on the sidelines as military conflicts raged nearby for almost two years.
As Sweida burns, Syria’s new rulers repeat old patterns, fueling sectarian conflict rather than fostering national unity.
The fighters in military-style uniforms pointed their rifles at the three unarmed men and ordered them out onto a sunny ...
Where this conflict stands today: The country is torn by war. No faction is likely to dominate. Millions remain internally ...
In the aftermath of intense sectarian fighting, the eerily silent streets of Syria's southern province of Sweida are filled ...
Sectarian violence has turned a Syrian city into a slaughterhouse, and survivors recount shelling, executions and burials in ...
Syria under President Ahmad Sharaa remains far from achieving genuine national reconciliation, a meaningful political ...
Sectarian violence in southern Syria is shattering hopes for a united country among the country's Druze minority ...
Clashes broke out last week that were sparked by tit-for-tat kidnappings between armed Bedouin clans and fighters with the ...
Assad’s fall, deadly sectarian clashes in southwestern Syria have exposed one of the biggest challenges to the country’s ...
Recent violence between Druze and Bedouins is a reminder of how elusive the goal of a cohesive Syria remains, and how easily ...
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