In Syrian camps, the future just might be female
ARISHA, Syria — Ibrahim Habloush is grateful to be here in Ain Issa, one of dozens of wind-swept desert camps set up in northeastern Syria for people displaced by the fight against Islamic State extremists. It is a safe place for his family of 10 while they wait for their ravaged city of Raqqa to be cleared of explosives and rubble. But the 50-year-old builder does have a complaint. “They give a lot of rights to women,” he explained. “If I raise my voice at a woman... Читать дальше...