Syria’s Assad reshuffles Cabinet amid harsh economic crisis
Syria's Bashar Assad addresses the new members of parliament in Damascus, Syria, August 12, 2020. (Photo by SANA via Reuters )


State media reported that Syria’s Bashar Assad replaced several Cabinet ministers Wednesday amid a sharp price increase and worsening economic conditions during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

SANA reported Assad replaced the ministers of oil, internal trade, industry and social affairs, and labor.

The news agency did not give a reason for the government reshuffle, but it comes amid harsh public criticism over rising prices and food shortages during Ramadan when observant Muslims abstain from eating and drinking from dawn to dusk.

Syria’s economy hit its lowest point this year since the start of the conflict in 2011, with spiraling inflation, a currency plunge, and a sharp increase in food prices.

It results from years of war, Western sanctions, widespread corruption, and a three-year economic meltdown in neighboring Lebanon.

After a Feb. 6 earthquake hit Türkiye and Syria and killed over 50,000 people, Damascus’ ties with some Arab countries improved somewhat with aid from around the region flowing into the war-torn country.

Syria hopes that improving relations with oil-rich Arab gulf nations that once supported the Syrian armed opposition will help ease the economic crisis.

Last week, Saudi state television reported that the kingdom is in talks with Syria to reopen its embassy in the war-torn nation for the first time in a decade. Other gulf nations, including the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Bahrain, recently reopened their embassies in Damascus.