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COMMON ANALYSIS
Last update: April 2024

In Syria, a wide range of different groups and individuals can be considered as actors of persecution or serious harm. This includes a multitude of internal and international actors pursuing their own interests and goals [Security 2023, 1.3, pp. 18-24; Actors, 1.2, pp. 4-11].

Since a March 2020 ceasefire which froze the last major frontline in Idlib governorate, the country has been de facto partitioned into four main areas controlled by different parties to the conflict: the GoS-controlled area (about two thirds of the country), the northeast controlled by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a territory in northern Syria under control of the Syrian National Army (SNA) and the area in the northwest controlled by the rebel group Hay’at Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS) [Security 2023, 1.1, pp. 16-17]. 

The map below (Figure 1) outlines the approximate areas of control and influence in the country as of June 2023. This map presents an indication and cannot be seen as an absolute representation of the situation in terms of spatial or temporal accuracy. The depictions on this map do not imply any opinion on the part of the EUAA concerning the legal status or effective control over any territory in the country

Figure 1. © UN Geospatial, Approximate areas of influence as of June 2023.

CG_SYR_2023_map_actors_control_and_influence

For more information on territorial control and/or presence of the actors of persecution or serious harm listed below, please refer to 5.3.4. Indiscriminate violence under Article 15(c) QD.