The Syrian Future Movement welcomes the signing of the “National Health Charter,” which was launched on November 26, 2025, in the presence of the Ministries of Health and Finance and representatives of national and international partners.
The Syrian Future Movement views this Charter as the first truly national project uniting Syrians around a single, noble goal: ensuring that healthcare becomes a guaranteed right for every Syrian citizen, in every corner of Syria, by 2030.
The Syrian Future Movement believes that the joint signing of this document by the Ministries of Health and Finance represents a historic moment, marking the end of the era of fragmented services and scattered efforts, and ushering in an era of a capable state that restores dignity to its citizens through their most basic and sacred right: the right to health and life.
Based on its deep belief that a new Syria can only be built through comprehensive projects that transcend divisions and precede disagreements, the Syrian Future Movement declares the following:
- Its full and unconditional support for the National Health Charter and considers it a top national priority.
- His complete readiness to dedicate all his intellectual, organizational, and political energies to supporting the implementation of the Charter, whether through participation in its committees, monitoring its performance, or mobilizing popular and international support for it.
- His call upon all national forces, international organizations, and Syrian expatriates to immediately join this Charter, as it is the shortest and most transparent path to rebuilding trust between Syrians and their state.
- His emphasis that health is the human bridge that can reconnect what has been severed, unite what has been divided, and heal wounds before healing bodies.
The Syrian Future Movement hopes that the current Syrian leadership, headed by President Ahmed al-Sharaa and the transitional government, realizes that building the Syria of the future does not begin with slogans, but with concrete steps that restore to the citizen the feeling that the state exists for him, not the other way around. Perhaps the National Health Charter is the first of these steps.