On August 5, 2025, the British government announced the provision of urgent humanitarian aid worth £1.7 million to more than 85,000 Syrians affected by the recent wave of violence in the governorates of As-Suwayda, Daraa, and Rural Damascus. This aid is being provided through partnerships with international and local organizations, most notably the Syria Support Fund (AFS), the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), and the International Medical Corps (IMC)
. The Syrian Future Movement appreciates this humanitarian initiative and views it as more than just a relief response, but rather a potential window toward a qualitative shift in the international community’s approach to Syria, based on interconnected humanitarian and political foundations. Accordingly, we call for:
- Expanding the scope of aid to include empowerment and sustainable development programs aimed at creating economic opportunities and strengthening local governance in affected areas
- Subjecting distribution mechanisms to independent civilian oversight to ensure fairness and transparency and prevent aid from being diverted into a tool for political or factional influence.
- Linking aid to community and cultural reconciliation initiatives based on Syria’s pluralistic heritage and restoring the religious and social symbolism that shapes the identity of the South.
- Establishing a new social contract that stems from the needs and aspirations of the people and achieves a balance between justice and participation, heritage and modernity, local and national.
The Syrian Future Movement believes that this British move, if approached with a constructive mindset and genuine partnership, can be the beginning of a more comprehensive political project that reshapes the relationship between Syrians and the state on the one hand, and between Syria and the world on the other, based on dignity, sovereignty, and participatory justice.