Middle East
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Cover image: FOCUS © FRANCE 24
06:07
Issued on: 16/06/2026 - 17:30 Modified: 16/06/2026 - 17:33
06:07 min
From the show
Reading time
1 min
Syria has been particularly hard hit by the decline in global humanitarian aid, especially from the US. In the northwest of the country, hundreds of thousands of displaced people are still living in makeshift shelters. When the Assad regime fell, they hoped to be able to return home. But on seeing their villages destroyed, most have remained stranded in camps, waiting for reconstruction that will take years. As time goes by, living conditions there are deteriorating and vital infrastructure such as hospitals are at risk of closing.
Our team has been to Syria 's vast Qah camp to meet some of these forgotten displaced people. FRANCE 24's Dana Alboz, Sophie Guignon and Mohamad Daboul report, with Josh Vardey.
By:
Sophie GUIGNON
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Read the full article at France 24 (English) →2 reports
France 24 (English)State / PublicCenter5 days ago In post-Assad Syria, displaced people await reconstructionIn post-Assad Syria, hundreds of thousands of displaced people remain in makeshift shelters, unable to return to their destroyed homes. Reconstruction efforts are slow, leading to worsening living conditions and risks to essential services like hospitals. The article highlights the situation in the Qah camp.
Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information about the displacement crisis in Syria without overtly favoring any political perspective. It focuses on the humanitarian impact and does not include explicit ideological commentary or biased language.
France 24 (Français)State / PublicCenter5 days ago In post-Assad Syria, displaced people are waiting for reconstructionThe article discusses the situation of displaced people in northwest Syria following the fall of Assad's regime. Many have been living in makeshift shelters for years, unable to return home due to the destruction of their villages. The lack of international humanitarian aid, particularly from the United States, has exacerbated the crisis. Essential infrastructure such as hospitals is at risk of closing, worsening living conditions in refugee camps like Qah.
Bias read (Center): The article presents a factual report on the humanitarian situation in Syria without overtly favoring any political side. It focuses on the challenges faced by displaced individuals and does not include biased language or selective sourcing that would indicate a clear ideological lean.