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When unrest roiling the Middle East hit Syria, it was a dramatic turn for Assad, a British-trained eye doctor who inherited power from his father in 2000 after three decades of iron-fisted rule. In January, he said his country is immune to such unrest because he is in tune with his people's needs. The unrest was touched by the arrest of several teenagers who scrawled anti-government graffiti on a wall in the southern agricultural city of Daraa, and quickly spread to other provinces. The protests and violence have eased in the past few days but tensions persist in Daraa and the Mediterranean city of Latakia. Troops on Monday fired tear gas on a crowd of some 4,000 people in Daraa who were calling for more political freedoms, witnesses said. They also fired live ammunition in the air to disperse the crowd.
[Associated
Press;
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