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Qatar to bankroll Syria’s public sector pay hike with $29m cash boost

The plan has reportedly gained approval from Washington, with Saudi Arabia also involved in the project

May 8, 2025 09:44
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Qatar is set to provide $29 million to fund a pay increase for Syrian civil servants (Pictured: Qatari prime minister and foreign minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani; Image: Getty)
1 min read

Qatar is set to invest $29 million to bankroll a pay hike for the Syrian public sector, according to a new report from Reuters.

The report states that the move, undertaken with US approval, will provide a “financial lifeline to the new Syrian government”, which is in the midst of a reconstruction process following the toppling of the Assad regime.
Qatari cash is expected to fund a long-promised 400 per cent pay rise for over a million government workers, who have seen their salaries cut in real terms thanks to crushing US economic sanctions and Assad-era corruption.

However, it will only be given to civilian departments, with the interior and defence ministries not included due to American concerns over the continued activity of Islamist militants in the country. The government will then create its own funds to match the investment from Qatar for the exempted departments.

Syria’s new interim president, former Al Qaeda militant Ahmed Al-Sharaa, has already drastically realigned its foreign policy away from Iran and its network of proxies and in favour of the West, particularly Turkey, and the Gulf States.