Syria’s Government Will Gradually Transfer Power to Interim Cabinet

Mohamed al-Bashir appointed caretaker Syrian PM for transitional government until March speaks in this screen grab obtained from a handout video taken in Damascus, Syria December 10, 2024. Al Arabiya TV/Handout via Reuters
Mohamed al-Bashir appointed caretaker Syrian PM for transitional government until March speaks in this screen grab obtained from a handout video taken in Damascus, Syria December 10, 2024. Al Arabiya TV/Handout via Reuters
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Syria’s Government Will Gradually Transfer Power to Interim Cabinet

Mohamed al-Bashir appointed caretaker Syrian PM for transitional government until March speaks in this screen grab obtained from a handout video taken in Damascus, Syria December 10, 2024. Al Arabiya TV/Handout via Reuters
Mohamed al-Bashir appointed caretaker Syrian PM for transitional government until March speaks in this screen grab obtained from a handout video taken in Damascus, Syria December 10, 2024. Al Arabiya TV/Handout via Reuters

Members of the Syrian government under ousted President Bashar al-Assad will gradually transfer power to a new transitional cabinet headed by Mohammed al-Bashir.

The departing government met with al-Bashir for the first time since Assad fled Damascus over the weekend. Al-Bashir had previously led the "salvation government" running the opposition stronghold in northwest Syria.

He told reporters after the meeting that the ministers discussed transferring the portfolios to the interim government during the transitional period until the beginning of March.

He said that in the coming days the new government will decide on each ministry.

Meanwhile, banks and shops were reopening in Damascus after the chaos and confusion of the first two days following Assad’s ouster.

Sadi Ahmad, manager of Syria Gulf Bank, said life is returning to normal. A customer who came to withdraw money from an ATM was surprised to see it functioning.

At the historic Hamadiyeh market, fighters who seized power were still standing guard but shops had reopened — even an ice cream stand.

Resident Maysoun Al-Qurabi said she was initially "against what happened," referring to the uprising, but changed her mind after seeing footage of rebels releasing inmates from the notorious Saydnaya prison.

"People are at ease and secure now," she said. "Before, people were hungry and scared."

Elsewhere, the United Nations said humanitarian operations in two major areas in northwestern Syria have resumed, deploying food, medical supplies, fuel and other needed services and supplies.

Spokesman Jens Laerke of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported that some health facilities were "overwhelmed" – in part due to staff shortages – and many border crossings have been closed, disrupting supply chains.

OCHA said humanitarian operations in some parts of northwestern Syria were put on hold in the early days of the recent escalation and resumed on Monday.

"As of yesterday, all humanitarian organizations in Idlib and northern Aleppo have resumed operations," Laerke told reporters at a UN briefing in Geneva.

He said the three border crossings from Türkiye used by the UN to deliver assistance into Syria remain open and "we are providing assistance in the northwest, including to those who have been newly displaced."

Even before the latest escalation nearly 17 million people in Syria needed humanitarian assistance. More than 1 million have been displaced across Idlib, Aleppo, Hama and Homs since the escalation.



Israel Carries Out More Airstrikes Deep inside Lebanon

File photo: This picture taken from an Israeli position along the border with southern Lebanon shows smoke billowing above the Lebanese village of Adaisseh during Israeli bombardment on January 22, 2024, amid ongoing cross-border tensions as fighting continues between Israel and Hamas militants in Gaza. (AFP)
File photo: This picture taken from an Israeli position along the border with southern Lebanon shows smoke billowing above the Lebanese village of Adaisseh during Israeli bombardment on January 22, 2024, amid ongoing cross-border tensions as fighting continues between Israel and Hamas militants in Gaza. (AFP)
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Israel Carries Out More Airstrikes Deep inside Lebanon

File photo: This picture taken from an Israeli position along the border with southern Lebanon shows smoke billowing above the Lebanese village of Adaisseh during Israeli bombardment on January 22, 2024, amid ongoing cross-border tensions as fighting continues between Israel and Hamas militants in Gaza. (AFP)
File photo: This picture taken from an Israeli position along the border with southern Lebanon shows smoke billowing above the Lebanese village of Adaisseh during Israeli bombardment on January 22, 2024, amid ongoing cross-border tensions as fighting continues between Israel and Hamas militants in Gaza. (AFP)

Israeli warplanes carried three airstrikes deep into eastern Lebanon on Friday for the second time since a ceasefire ended the war between Hezbollah and Israel a month ago, Lebanon’s state-run news agency said.
No casualties were reported in the strikes on the Bekaa Valley town of Qousaya and the target remained unclear. The Israeli military said its air force struck “infrastructure used to smuggle weapons via Syria” to Hezbollah near the Janta crossing on the Syrian-Lebanese border, about 9 kilometers (5 miles) north of Qousaya. Israel accused Hezbollah’s Unit 4400 of overseeing smuggling operations from Iran through Syria, adding that it had killed the unit’s commander in early October, reported The Associated Press.
Since the ceasefire took effect on Nov. 27, the Israeli army has conducted near-daily operations in southern Lebanon, including shootings, house demolitions, excavations, tank shelling and airstrikes. These actions have killed at least 27 people, wounded more than 30 and destroyed residential buildings, including a mosque.
The United Nations peacekeeping mission, UNIFIL, said it has observed “concerning actions” by Israeli forces, including the destruction of homes and road closures.
On Thursday, the Lebanese army accused Israeli troops of breaching the ceasefire by encroaching into southern Lebanon. Israeli bulldozers erected dirt barricades to block roads in Wadi Al-Hujayr.
The Lebanese army later on Thursday said that following intervention by the ceasefire supervision committee, Israeli forces withdrew, and Lebanese soldiers removed the barriers to reopen the road in the area.
The US-brokered ceasefire, which ended the 14-month war, demands that Hezbollah and Israeli forces withdraw from southern Lebanon within 60 days, allowing Lebanese troops to gradually deploy south of the Litani River.