News

Sectarian violence in southern Syria is shattering hopes for a united country among the country's Druze minority.
Armed Bedouin clans have withdrawn from the Druze-majority Syrian city of Sweida after a week of deadly clashes. A U.S.
Interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa's government responded by deploying forces to the city. Druze residents of Suweida told the ...
In the aftermath of intense sectarian fighting, the eerily silent streets of Syria's southern province of Sweida are filled ...
Clad in black in a modest apartment in central Beirut, Rima weeps for the relatives she lost in the recent wave of violence ...
Syria’s interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa has urged Sunni Bedouin tribes to honor a ceasefire aimed at ending deadly clashes ...
Tens of thousands of people remained displaced by the violence and the United Nations has been unable to bring in much-needed ...
A Syrian-American who was taking care of his ill father was among the eight Druze men kidnapped from their family home and ...
Clashes between Druze militias and Sunni Arab tribes have continued and grown after Syrian Army forces withdrew from the ...
When we first received reports about the hospital massacre, we hoped survivors' minds had imagined it—trauma playing tricks.
Syrian authorities evacuated Bedouin families from the Druze-majority city of Sweida on Monday, after a ceasefire in the ...