In a special edition, we focus on Syria, a nation emerging from decades of a brutal dictatorship. The country’s interim leader Ahmed al-Sharaa has signed a constitutional declaration, laying out rights for women and freedom of expression. This after his Islamist-led rebels toppled Bashar al-Assad’s government last December. Yet sectarian violence still threatens to split the country apart as we saw recently with those attacks directed at the Alawite community, treated as associates of Assad. We report on the fears of Syrian women that their new-found freedoms may be under threat with the rise of religious observance. Annette Young also talks to Mariam Jalabi, a co-founder of the Syrian Women’s Political Movement, an umbrella organisation representing women from all communities and pushing for them to have a seat at the table.
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