Syria, German Foreign Minister and Turkey
Thousands of Syrian doctors work in Germany and the fall of Bashar Assad is raising concern over the potential consequences for the health sector if many of them were to return home
Nearly a decade after hundreds of thousands of Syrians arrived in Germany, many are now well-integrated and settled in jobs — and tens of thousands have gained German citizenship.
Chancellor Scholz says Berlin encouraged by signals from Damascus but emphasizes concrete steps toward inclusive government, rule of law, protection of minorities - Anadolu Ajansı
Olaf Scholz has lost a vote of confidence in his leadership and Germany now faces its first election of the truly post-Angela Merkel era.
Most of them came from 2015-16, after Angela Merkel's government made a decision not to close Germany's borders to refugees fleeing Syria's civil war. The mood at the time was that Germany would ...
Many on the centre and Left of German politics argue that Syria is no safer than it was. They also point out that Germany's health service would be in chaos if the country's 6,000 Syrian doctors ...
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock on Friday said her country would judge Syria's new Islamist-led HTS rulers "by their actions" amid concerns over the group's roots in radical Islam.
Discussions to possibly lift EU sanctions against Syria are under way but are unlikely to resolve soon, Germany's special envoy to Syria, Stefan Schneck, has told The National. The request to lift sanctions was made publicly this week by Syria's de facto new leader,
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock on Friday said Syria's future is "hanging by a thread" as she called on Turkey to help stabilize the country during a visit to Ankara. "Syria must neither become a pawn of foreign powers nor an experiment by radical forces,
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock warned against the threat of "new violence" in Kurdish-held northern areas of Syria as she left for a visit to neighbouring Turkey on Friday.
Over 100,000 people are believed to be buried in mass graves in Syria, exposing the ‘machinery of death’ run by the ousted President Bashar al-Assad. Thousands of people remain missing as families desperately search for their relatives.