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  • Mass expropriation in Syria

    How Assad is preventing the return of refugees

    The Syrian war has moved through many phases and included a number of changing actors. But one aspect has remained constant throughout: the Assad regime is using the conflict to rid the nation once and for all of what it considers to be undesirable demographic groups. By Stefan Buchen and Sulaiman Tadmory

  • Churches in Syria after the fall of East Aleppo

    Time for a new beginning

    Christian Churches in Aleppo have welcomed the government troops' victory. But after five years of war, it is important that they abandon the paradigm that the Assad regime is the protector of religious minorities and work tirelessly to overcome the religious divide. By Claudia Mende

  • Interview with "Der Spiegel" reporter Christoph Reuter

    The strategists of terror

    At present, IS is the most dangerous terrorist militia in the world. It controls a territory that stretches from north-eastern Syria to western Iraq, including almost all Syrian oil and gas fields. Igal Avidan spoke to Christoph Reuter (correspondent for the German weekly news magazine "Der Spiegel") about the ascent of IS

  • Syrian Christians and the Assad regime

    "Assad is only protecting himself"

    Syria's dictator Bashar al-Assad likes to present himself as a champion of his nation's religious minorities, in particular the Christians. But increasing numbers of Syrian Christians in exile are resisting this narrative. By Martina Sabra

  • view of the Armenian Orthodox St. Serge church in Damascus (photo: dpa)
    Syria: The Opposition and the Church

    A Slap in the Face for the Pro-Democracy Movement

    While church leaders pledge their support for the Assad regime, Christians in Syria are backing the protest movement for democratic change. The endorsement of the regime's propaganda slogans by the representatives of the churches puts them in an increasingly precarious position, as Claudia Mende reports

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