Syria
Quick facts
Syria, country overview
Press freedom
Syria, RSF World Press Freedom Index, 2026
places
Trajectory: 179th (2024), 177th (2025), 141st (2026). Source: RSF World Press Freedom Index.
Syria in 2026 is in the midst of a profound political transition following the fall of the Assad regime in December 2024, which ended more than five decades of Ba’athist rule and one of the world’s most repressive media environments. The country is governed by a transitional administration under President Ahmed al-Sharaa. An interim constitutional declaration was signed in March 2025, setting a five-year transition framework, and a transitional government was formed on 29 March 2025, with al-Sharaa leading the executive and no prime minister. An appointed transitional parliament was selected in October 2025. The transition remains contested and at times violent, with continued fighting and tension in 2026, including clashes involving Kurdish-led forces in the north and northeast, and episodes of communal violence on the coast and in Sweida. Against this backdrop, the new authorities have pledged to rebuild state institutions, including official media, and to support press freedom, while the practical and legal architecture of a free press is still being constructed.
The change in Syria’s media environment has been dramatic. Reporters Without Borders ranked Syria 141st of 180 in its 2026 World Press Freedom Index, up 36 places from 177th in 2025, the single largest year-on-year improvement of any country in the Index’s 25-year history. RSF recorded progress across all five of its indicators, with the political indicator rising from 170th to 103rd, the economic indicator from 179th to 107th, the legal indicator from 177th to 139th, the social indicator from 173rd to 134th, and the security indicator from 178th to 154th. The improvement is nonetheless heavily qualified. Syria remains in RSF’s “very serious” category, and the new press environment is still fragile. The Assad-era legal arsenal used to justify media repression is no longer being enforced, and exiled and independent outlets have returned, but the future ability of journalists to criticise the new authorities remains one of the core tests of the transition. Journalists continue to face violence, intimidation and uncertainty in contested and minority regions, while the media economy is unsettled and institutional safeguards remain incomplete. The Ministry of Information launched a 2026 Syrian Media Code of Conduct in February 2026, but implementation, enforcement and independent oversight mechanisms remain unclear. No independent media regulator yet exists, and there is no tested statutory guarantee of editorial autonomy.
SMM maps Syria’s principal state media as a state-controlled core whose structure has not yet been transformed by the political transition. The General Organization of Radio and Television (ORTAS), the Al-Wahda Foundation for Press, Printing, Publishing and Distribution, and the Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) are all classified State-Controlled, reflecting continued state ownership, administration through the Ministry of Information, public funding and the absence of any independent regulator or statutory safeguard for editorial autonomy. All three have been relaunched, rebranded or repositioned under the transition, with new leadership, reform rhetoric and a stated ambition to move from regime propaganda toward public-service or professional models, and the Ministry of Information itself changed leadership in May 2026, when Khaled Fawaz Zaarour replaced Hamza al-Mustafa. A privately owned title previously mapped in this country, the Syrian Arab Publishing and Distributing Company associated with Al-Watan and historically linked to sanctioned former-regime businessman Rami Makhlouf, has been excluded from the 2026 database: although Al-Watan continues to publish, SMM could not confirm the company’s current ownership and control during the transition, and therefore could not verify it as an identifiable, controlled operator for the cycle. The defining feature of the cycle is therefore a sharp divergence between a transformed external environment and a state-media core whose structural determinants of control have not yet changed, leaving every mapped outlet in the State-Controlled category pending genuine institutional reform.
Media architecture
Syria, State Media Matrix mapping of principal outlets, 2026
SC = State-Controlled. See the State Media Matrix typology for category definitions. Mapping covers principal outlets profiled by SMM and is not exhaustive of Syria’s media sector.
