A Syrian woman sits with her grandson outside a damaged building on the main street of the Syrian village of Treimsa. Credit: FAMSI.

It’s normal to work under these conditions, to be threatened with arrest on one side and kidnap on the other, to have to conduct major surgery underground and constantly see buildings around us reduced to rubble. In the last year alone our hospital was targeted five times. That’s become normal.

Heartbreaking diary entries by one of the only doctors remaining in Aleppo.
↩︎ New Statesman
Oct 6, 2016

The problem is that Assad cannot win, and at the same time he is not losing.

The ceasefire has brought a moment of calm to Aleppo, but it doesn't address the outstanding question of the Syrian Civil War: What is going to happen with Assad?
↩︎ New York Times
Sep 19, 2016

Architect Marwa al-Sabouni examines how failures of infrastructures accelerated the Syrian Civil War, compounding its losses from tragic to horrific. "People outside think our most difficult challenges are weapon-related. But the truth is that the hospitals, which have no proper equipment, are killing more people now than bullets,” she told the Guardian.

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