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QAMISHLI, Syria (North Press) â Reporters Without Borders (RSF) stated on Tuesday that Syria remains the worldâs most dangerous country for journalists, with 37 media workers still missing one year after the fall of the Bashar al-Assad regime. In a emerging report, RSF declared that numerous of the missing were abducted or detained before Assadâs ouster in December 2024, and that the collapse of his security apparatus has not resulted in emerging information about their fate. Furthermore, some were imprisoned by Assadâs intelligence branches, while others were taken hostage by the Islamic State group (ISIS) at the height of its territorial control.
The report also highlighted the role of elements of the jihadist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which consolidated its power following the regimeâs collapse. RSF stated HTS continues to hold multiple journalists and called for their âimmediate and unconditionalâ release. Despite significant political shifts over the past year, the RSF warned that families of missing media workers remain without answers.
Syria now accounts for more than a quarter of the worldâs missing journalists, reflecting what RSF described as the âlong-term and institutionalized nature of enforced disappearancesâ across successive armed actors. The report urged Syrian authorities, local armed groups, and international stakeholders to prioritize the uncovering of mass graves, prison archives, and detention sites linked to past and present factions. The RSF said truth and accountability for missing journalists are essential to any genuine transition toward transparency and justice.
By Jwan Shekaki

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