Syria’s Neighboring Foreign Ministers Call for Lifting Sanctions and Reconciliation 

This handout picture released by Jordan's Foreign Ministry shows (front L to R) Syria's interim Foreign Minister Asaad Shaibani, Iraq's Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein, Jordan's Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi, Türkiye's Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, and Lebanon's Foreign Minister Youssef Rajji posing for a family photo during the Syria and Neighboring Countries meeting in Amman on March 9, 2025. (Jordanian Foreign Ministry / AFP)
This handout picture released by Jordan's Foreign Ministry shows (front L to R) Syria's interim Foreign Minister Asaad Shaibani, Iraq's Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein, Jordan's Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi, Türkiye's Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, and Lebanon's Foreign Minister Youssef Rajji posing for a family photo during the Syria and Neighboring Countries meeting in Amman on March 9, 2025. (Jordanian Foreign Ministry / AFP)
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Syria’s Neighboring Foreign Ministers Call for Lifting Sanctions and Reconciliation 

This handout picture released by Jordan's Foreign Ministry shows (front L to R) Syria's interim Foreign Minister Asaad Shaibani, Iraq's Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein, Jordan's Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi, Türkiye's Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, and Lebanon's Foreign Minister Youssef Rajji posing for a family photo during the Syria and Neighboring Countries meeting in Amman on March 9, 2025. (Jordanian Foreign Ministry / AFP)
This handout picture released by Jordan's Foreign Ministry shows (front L to R) Syria's interim Foreign Minister Asaad Shaibani, Iraq's Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein, Jordan's Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi, Türkiye's Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, and Lebanon's Foreign Minister Youssef Rajji posing for a family photo during the Syria and Neighboring Countries meeting in Amman on March 9, 2025. (Jordanian Foreign Ministry / AFP)

Syria's top diplomat and his counterparts from neighboring countries Sunday called for the lifting of Western-led sanctions on Syria and post-war reconciliation.

The foreign ministers of Türkiye, Iraq, Jordan and Lebanon made their remarks alongside Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad Hassan al-Shibani following a meeting in the Jordanian capital Amman.

They come following days of clashes between Syrian security forces and loyalists to ousted President Bashar al-Assad in Syria's coastal province. Some rights groups say hundreds of civilians, mostly Alawite, were killed in revenge attacks after the fighting broke out. The Associated Press could not independently verify those numbers.

The United States and Europe have been hesitant to lift sanctions on Syria before there is a clear political transition that is democratic and inclusive of Syria’s minorities and civil society. At the same time, the country desperately needs money to rebuild after years of war and pull millions out of poverty. The United Nations estimates that some 90% of Syria’s population lives in poverty.

“We are protecting all components of the Syrian people, and we do not discriminate between them. We will not allow the repetition of the tragedies of the Syrian people,” said al-Shibani.

Syria's new authorities under interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa have struggled to convince the United States and Europe to lift sanctions to start rebuilding the country after 13 years of war and reconcile with the Kurds in the northeast and Druze in the south to exert state authority across the country.

The weekend's violence appears likely to stymie attempts to remove sanctions in the immediate future. The US and UN released statements condemning the killing of civilians, which US Secretary of State Marco Rubio called for Damascus to hold the perpetrators accountable.

Also on Sunday, al-Sharaa announced the formation of a committee tasked with investigating the violence in coastal communities, including “violations against civilians” and another one tasked with “maintaining civil peace.”

Al-Sharaa said in a video statement that the outbreak of violence was part of “attempts by remnants of the former regime, with foreign parties behind them, to create new strife and drag our country to a civil war, with the goal of dividing it and destroying its unity and stability.”

He said the country’s new authorities “will not tolerate the remnants of Assad who committed crimes against our army forces and state institutions” and promised to “hold accountable with all firmness and without leniency anyone who was involved in the blood of civilians or harmed our people.”

It remained to be seen whether those measures will succeed in calming the situation and reassuring both Syrians and the international community.

Syria's neighbors fear that the country's pulverized economy and internal tensions could impact their own stability.

“Stability in Syria requires dialogue with the country's various components,” said Iraqi Foreign Minister Fouad Hussein at a joint news conference.

The foreign ministers were critical of what they said was foreign intervention in the region after Israeli troops conducted military operations in southern Syria and seized a UN buffer zone that divides Syria from the Golan Heights, which Israel seized and annexed in 1967. On Sunday, the Israeli commanding officers visited and assessed the buffer zone.

Turkish Foreign Minister Fidan welcomed the “historic” meeting and called for cooperation to decrease tension in Syria, and said he alongside others will work against sleeper cells belonging to the extremist ISISI group and affiliates of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party in Syria and Iraq.

“This is a regional problem. Regardless of our ideals we should all combat ISIS as well as the PKK, they are both terrorist entities,” he added.

Iraq's foreign minister warned that ISIS sleeper cells are growing in numbers.

“We need to take the initiative first in exchanging views and information about (the ISIS group's) latest operations and especially their expansion not only on the Syrian borders with Iraq and Jordan but also their expansion in the Syrian land,” said Hussein.



Gaza Hospitals Overwhelmed by Hundreds of Injured from Israeli Barrage

Mourners react next to the bodies of Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes, at Al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital, in Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip March 18, 2025. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed
Mourners react next to the bodies of Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes, at Al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital, in Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip March 18, 2025. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed
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Gaza Hospitals Overwhelmed by Hundreds of Injured from Israeli Barrage

Mourners react next to the bodies of Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes, at Al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital, in Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip March 18, 2025. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed
Mourners react next to the bodies of Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes, at Al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital, in Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip March 18, 2025. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed

Israel's sudden onslaught of airstrikes overnight overwhelmed Gaza hospitals already reeling from weeks of an aid blockade, medics and health authorities said on Tuesday, as ambulances ferried in hundreds of badly injured survivors.

Video obtained by Reuters showed rescue workers running with stretchers across smoking debris, ambulances rushing to hospitals, a morgue full of bloodied bodies in white bags, and casualties lying outside while relatives mourned the dead.

"We received no less than 400 cases in less than two hours," said Mohammad Qishta, a Medicins Sans Frontieres emergency doctor working at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis.

"There were some serious cases such as burns ... third degree burns on the face, amputations, wounds on the head, wounds on the chest," he said, Reuters reported.

Gaza health authorities issued an urgent statement on Tuesday asking residents to donate blood, saying stocks of different blood types had been exhausted.

Gaza's health system was devastated by Israel's 15-month military campaign, launched in response to the October 7 attack by Hamas in 2023, putting many of the territory's hospitals out of action, killing medics and reducing crucial supplies.

Although a ceasefire came into effect in January, talks to transition to a second phase of the agreement stalled in February. Israel announced it was cutting off all aid, including medical supplies, into Gaza on March 2 over a dispute with Hamas on the next phase of the deal.

"The entry of all goods and supplies to the Gaza Strip will be halted," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said at the time.

Tuesday morning's airstrikes, which Palestinian health authorities said killed more than 400 people, took place across the tiny, crowded Gaza Strip where the war has left most people homeless.

Israel said it was resuming airstrikes in response to Hamas' rejection of its proposals for extending the ceasefire.

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The World Health Organization spokesperson Tarik Jasarevic said 20 of Gaza's 36 hospitals remained partially functional. However, far fewer were still able to handle surgery, aid agencies said. Gaza Health Ministry spokesman Khalil Al-Deqran said only seven of the territory's hospitals were still providing services.

Jasarevic said the shortage of medicines meant even in working hospitals medics might not be able to provide treatment.

"The occupation did not allow the entry of medical equipment, devices and very necessary medical consumables to maintain what remains of the health system and functioning hospitals," Gaza hospitals director Mohammed Zaqout said.

The International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, which works with rescue and health services in Gaza, said its team in the territory had reported on Tuesday that medical facilities were overwhelmed.

"The situation is rapidly deteriorating, even before the recent developments, because since the beginning of March we didn't get any other aid, any other medicine," the federation's spokesperson Tommaso Della Longa said.

Even reaching casualties is more difficult because of damage to ambulances and a lack of fuel, said Shaina Low of the Norwegian Refugee Council, which is suspending most operations in Gaza because of the danger from strikes.

"We've already seen the suspension of 20 ambulances in Gaza because of lack of petrol. We're going to see hospitals shutting down," she added.