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When former leader Bashar al-Assad fell, new Syria war crimes investigations began. But U.S. budget cuts have halted some work. For families of the disappeared, it means justice delayed or denied.
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bne IntelliNews on MSNSaudi Arabia plans to pay off Syria's debts to World BankBy bnm Gulf bureau The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is preparing to settle Syria's outstanding debts to the World Bank, according ...
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Turkish Deputy Foreign Minister Nuh Yilmaz, World Food Programme Chief Operating Officer Carl Skau, U.N. Special Envoy for ...
Syrian leader Ahmed al-Sharaa and visiting Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam discussed land and sea border demarcation and ...
Syria’s civil war drove a wedge between the residents of the small town of Maaloula, where two-thirds are Christian and ...
When Syria's Assad regime fell, victims gained access to archives on 130,000 missing people. Organizations compiling those documents lost U.S. funding under Trump, hobbling war crimes investigations.
Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa has made his first visit to the United Arab Emirates. The UAE's leaders have been ...
Secretary of State Marco Rubio and other administration officials had pledged to spare emergency food programs and other life-and-death aid even as the Trump administration and Elon Musk's Department ...
The rationale was to address "mismanagement, fraud, and misaligned priorities." Former USAID official Jeremy Konyndyk said ...
Mahmoud Khalil, who led protests at Columbia University against Israel, appeared in immigration court in Louisiana Friday.
A Louisiana immigration judge said the Trump administration can move forward with efforts to deport Mahmoud Khalil, the ...
A Muslim convert who researched military locations and threatened to "flatten" a Birmingham mosque in a terror attack has ...
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