#javascript#distributed_companies#hacktoberfest#jobs_search#jobsearch#jobseeker#remote#remote_companies#remote_job#remote_work
This list shows hundreds of companies, mostly in tech, that let people work from home either part-time or full-time, with many offering jobs to people all over the world. The list includes big names like Microsoft, Amazon, and Shopify, as well as smaller companies, and covers many different types of work, from software and design to education and health. For anyone looking for a remote job, this is a helpful starting point because it saves time—instead of searching one by one, you can quickly see which companies are open to remote work and find links to their websites for more details or to apply. This makes it much easier to find a job that fits your skills and lets you work from anywhere.
https://github.com/remoteintech/remote-jobs
🇩🇪🇸🇾 Il cancelliere Friedrich #Merz ha incontrato il presidente siriano Ahmed #AlSharaa, dichiarando che #Germania e #Siria collaboreranno per il rimpatrio di centinaia di migliaia di rifugiati siriani, i quali "avranno un ruolo importante nella ricostruzione del loro Paese". L’incontro ha suscitato critiche da parte di alcune comunità siriane che temono un’accelerazione dei rimpatri post-guerra a scapito delle minoranze.
@UltimoraPolitics24
📰 Syria’s New Iron Pact: Kurds Fold Into Assad’s Army
Syria’s new government and the Kurdish-led SDF have cut a deal: the SDF will fold into the national army, giving up its autonomy in exchange for staying in the country’s power structure.
The agreement, announced Friday after intense clashes between the two sides, creates a new Syrian military division made up of three SDF‑trained brigades, plus a separate brigade for Kurdish fighters in Kobani, according to SDF and government sources. Kurdish‑led civil institutions in the northeast will now be integrated into the central government.
In practice, this means the end of the de facto Kurdish state that, at its height, controlled about a quarter of Syrian territory and its oil and gas fields. Government forces will now move into the Kurdish-held cities of Hasaka and Qamishli, where they had long been barred from entering.
The deal is the result of pressure, not goodwill. After months of stalled talks, Syria’s new President Ahmed al‑Sharaa launched a military offensive into Kurdish territory, capturing a large part of the northeast, at a time when the U.S. had already withdrawn its political and military support for the SDF, analysts say.
Without Washington in their corner, SDF chief Mazloum Abdi agreed to let his forces be absorbed into the new Syrian army, in a deal Washington now hails as a “profound and historic milestone” toward national reconciliation and stability.
The U.S. has long seen the SDF as its main ally in Syria against ISIS; now, it is actively facilitating the group’s integration into the central state, not as an independent power, but as a component of the new regime.
The SDF traded its guns and governance for a place at the table, but the exact boundaries of Kurdish rights and representation remain vague. The real question is whether this is a ceasefire, or just the first stage of full assimilation.
As the banners change and the lines redraw, the calculation is brutal and clear: Better to rule from within the regime than die alone against it.
#Syria#Kurds#SDF#AlSharaa#MiddleEast
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