
The people of Syria had almost lost hope before the sudden fall of dictator Bashar al-Assad, so today “hope is a new thing for them”. That’s the sentiment of an Iraqi-born internationally recognised photojournalist who grew up in Syria and returned there when the Assad regime fell in December 2024 to capture the fighting and its aftermath. Salwan Georges is a photojournalist for The Washington Post, and his work inside Syria is currently on display at the Visa pour l’Image photojournalism festival in the southern French city of Perpignan. He spoke to us in Perspective.
Trending
- Fabienne Chapot keert terug naar de kern
- Gavin Casalegno, Lana Condor Vs. Shark
- Syria slams new Israeli incursion in southern Daraa province
- Why Péter Magyar is reluctant to align with the EU on Ukraine
- Karlovy Vary Film Festival Sets Supersized Red Carpet for Everybody
- French hospitals 'better prepared': 'Important lessons learned from deadly 2003 heatwave'
- Get an Exclusive First Look at ‘Minions and Monsters’
- Iraq's push for bigger OPEC quota driven by revenue pressures, new oil investment
