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Syria: Ancient Glories, Modern Conflicts

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  • Syria: Ancient Glories, Modern Conflicts

    SYRIA: ANCIENT GLORIES, MODERN CONFLICTS

    Agence France Presse -- English
    May 24, 2007 Thursday 1:22 PM GMT

    Syria, set to reelect its president on Sunday in a one-candidate
    referendum, is a country steeped in history that today is embroiled
    in some of the world's most intractable dramas.

    In addition to the decades-long conflict with Israel to the south and
    controversy over its role in Lebanon to the west, Syria has since 2003
    found itself on the front lines of the US-led war in Iraq, to its east.

    A brief factfile:

    HISTORY: Since ancient times what is today Syria has been ruled,
    among others, by the Persians, the Greeks, the Romans, the Byzantines
    and a series of Islamic empires concluding with the Ottoman, which
    collapsed in the early 20th century.

    The country is home to many historic sites, and it was on the road
    to Damascus, one of the world's oldest cities, that the Christian
    apostle Saint Paul "saw the light" and was converted.

    Syria's modern borders were defined after World War I, when the
    country came under French administration and was shorn of several
    territories including what is today Lebanon.

    Independence after World War II brought a series of coups, culminating
    with a military regime under Hafez al-Assad, whose son, Bashar,
    succeeded him on his death in 2000 and is still in power today.

    Under the elder Assad, Syria was for many years close to the Soviet
    Union and professed strong Arab nationalism, although a split with the
    dominant party in neighbouring in Iraq led it to form a long-lasting
    alliance with Iran.

    In the 1967 Arab-Israeli war Syria lost the strategic Golan Heights to
    Israel. A decade later Assad's military intervention in Lebanon was at
    first welcomed by the West but later turned sour, ending only in 2005.

    Since 2004 the United States has imposed economic sanctions on Syria,
    accusing it of supporting terrorism.

    In recent years Syria has taken in around one million Iraqi refugees,
    fleeing the effects of the US-led invasion of 2003.

    GEOGRAPHY: At 185,000 square kilometres (71,000 square miles), Syria
    is slightly smaller than Britain.

    CAPITAL: Damascus

    POPULATION: 19 million, almost all Arabs, with small Armenian and
    Kurdish minorities.

    LANGUAGE: Arabic

    RELIGION: Muslim (90 percent), a majority of which are Sunni, but
    with a minority belonging to the Allawite sect, to which the Assad
    family belongs. Christian (10 percent).

    ARMED FORCES: Estimated at about 308,000

    ECONOMY: Syria has modest amounts of oil, and farming accounts for
    around one-third of Gross Domestic Product. The World Bank classifies
    Syria as a middle income counry, with a per capita GDP of 1,200
    dollars in 2006.

    Much of the economy is state controlled, though a modest programme
    of privatisation is underway.
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