In the few areas not retaken by Assad’s forces, people gather to reiterate the same demands protesters made a decade ago

Kasem’s teenage years were spent living under siege in the city of Homs, where friends and relatives disappeared in regime prisons and her family lived much of the time without electricity, struggling to secure food and medicine. All the while, Bashar al-Assad’s air force dropped barrel bombs and cluster munitions on their neighbourhood.

When the city fell, the Kasems were faced with a choice millions more would make during the course of the war: stay and face Assad’s troops, who would treat them like terrorists, or flee to Idlib province – also unstable, but at least outside regime control.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Selling off Channel 4 is a terrible idea. Here’s a better one | Phil Redmond

Yes, it’s time for a change – so why not merge the…

Fortress Zaporizhzhia prepares to fight as war closes in

Trenches are dug and teachers receive gun training in last large city…