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OFFICIAL NAME: |
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Syrian Arab Republic |
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GEOGRAPHY: |
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Area: 185,170 sq. km. (71,504
sq. mi.), including 1,295 sq.
km. of Israeli-occupied
territory; about the size of
North Dakota.
Cities: Capital--Damascus
(pop. 5 million). Other
cities--Aleppo (4.5
million), Homs (1.8 million),
Hama (1.6 million), Lattakia (1
million), Idleb (1.2 million),
al-Hasakeh (1.3 million).
Terrain: Narrow coastal plain
with a double mountain belt in
the west; large, semiarid and
desert plateau to the east.
Climate: Mostly desert; hot,
dry, sunny summers (June to
August) and mild, rainy winters
(December to February) along
coast. |
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PEOPLE: |
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Nationality: Noun and
adjective--Syrian(s).
Population (July 2003 est.):
18.2 million.
Growth rate (2004 est.): 2.58%.
Major ethnic groups: Arabs
(90%), Kurds (9%), Armenians,
Circassians, Turkomans.
Religions: Sunni Muslims (74%),
Alawis (12%), Christians (10%),
Druze (3%), and small numbers of
other Muslim sects, Jews, and
Yazidis.
Languages: Arabic (official),
English and French (widely
understood), Kurdish, Armenian,
Aramaic, Circassian.
Education: Years compulsory--primary,
6 yrs. Attendance--98.7%.
Literacy--89.7% male, 64%
female.
Health (2002 est.): Infant
mortality rate--23/1,000.
Life expectancy--68.47 yrs.
male, 71.02 yrs. female.
Work force (5.5 million, 2002
est.): Services (including
government)--39.7%;
agriculture--30.3%;
industry and commerce--30%.
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GOVERNMENT: |
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Type: Republic, under Arab
Socialist Ba'ath Party regimes
since March 1963.
Independence: April 17, 1946.
Constitution: March 13, 1973.
Branches: Executive--president,
two vice presidents, prime
minister, Council of Ministers
(cabinet). Legislative--unicameral
People's Council. Judicial--Supreme
Constitutional Court, High
Judicial Council, Court of
Cassation, State Security
Courts.
Administrative subdivisions: 13
provinces and city of Damascus
(administered as a separate
unit).
Political parties: Arab
Socialist Resurrection (Ba'ath)
Party, Syrian Arab Socialist
Party, Arab Socialist Union,
Syrian Communist Party, Arab
Socialist Unionist Movement,
Democratic Socialist Union
Party.
Suffrage: Universal at 18.
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ECONOMY: |
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GDP:
$22.2 billion (at current
prices).
Real growth rate: 1.7%.
Per capita GDP: $1,155.
Natural resources: Crude oil
and natural gas, phosphates,
asphalt, rock salt, marble,
gypsum, iron ore, chrome and
manganese ores
Agriculture: Products--cotton,
wheat, barley, sugar beets,
fruits and vegetables. Arable
land--32%.
Industry: Types--mining,
manufacturing (textiles, food
processing), construction,
petroleum.
Trade: Exports--$4.980
billion: petroleum, textiles,
phosphates, antiquities, fruits
and vegetables, cotton. Major
markets--EU, Arab countries,
U.S., New Independent States,
Eastern Europe. Imports--$6.550
billion: foodstuffs, metal and
metal products, machinery,
textiles, petroleum. Major
suppliers--Germany, Turkey,
Italy, France, U.S., Japan. |
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HISTORY: |
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Archaeologists
have
demonstrated
that Syria was
the center of
one of the most
ancient
civilizations on
earth. Around
the excavated
city of Ebla in
northern Syria,
discovered in
1975, a great
Semitic empire
spread from the
Red Sea north to
Turkey and east
to Mesopotamia
from 2500 to
2400 B.C. The
city of Ebla
alone during
that time had a
population
estimated at
260,000.
Scholars believe
the language of
Ebla to be the
oldest Semitic
language.
Syria was
occupied
successively by
Canaanites,
Phoenicians,
Hebrews,
Arameans,
Assyrians,
Babylonians,
Persians,
Greeks, Romans,
Nabataeans,
Byzantines, and,
in part,
Crusaders before
finally coming
under the
control of the
Ottoman Turks.
Syria is
significant in
the history of
Christianity;
Paul was
converted on the
road to Damascus
and established
the first
organized
Christian Church
at Antioch in
ancient Syria,
from which he
left on many of
his missionary
journeys.
Damascus,
settled about
2500 B.C., is
one of the
oldest
continuously
inhabited cities
in the world. It
came under
Muslim rule in
A.D. 636.
Immediately
thereafter, the
city's power and
prestige reached
its peak, and it
became the
capital of the
Omayyad Empire,
which extended
from Spain to
India from A.D.
661 to A.D. 750,
when the Abbasid
caliphate was
established at
Baghdad, Iraq.
Damascus
became a
provincial
capital of the
Mameluke Empire
around 1260. It
was largely
destroyed in
1400 by
Tamerlane, the
Mongol
conqueror, who
removed many of
its craftsmen to
Samarkand.
Rebuilt, it
continued to
serve as a
capital until
1516. In 1517,
it fell under
Ottoman rule.
The Ottomans
remained for the
next 400 years,
except for a
brief occupation
by Ibrahim Pasha
of Egypt from
1832 to 1840.
French
Occupation
In 1920, an
independent Arab
Kingdom of Syria
was established
under King
Faysal of the
Hashemite
family, who
later became
King of Iraq.
However, his
rule over Syria
ended after only
a few months,
following the
clash between
his Syrian Arab
forces and
regular French
forces at the
battle of
Maysalun. French
troops occupied
Syria later that
year after the
League of
Nations put
Syria under
French mandate.
With the fall of
France in 1940,
Syria came under
the control of
the Vichy
Government until
the British and
Free French
occupied the
country in July
1941. Continuing
pressure from
Syrian
nationalist
groups forced
the French to
evacuate their
troops in April
1946, leaving
the country in
the hands of a
republican
government that
had been formed
during the
mandate.
Independence to
1970
Although rapid
economic
development
followed the
declaration of
independence of
April 17, 1946,
Syrian politics
from
independence
through the late
1960s were
marked by
upheaval. A
series of
military coups,
begun in 1949,
undermined
civilian rule
and led to army
colonel Adib
Shishakli's
seizure of power
in 1951. After
the overthrow of
President
Shishakli in a
1954 coup,
continued
political
maneuvering
supported by
competing
factions in the
military
eventually
brought Arab
nationalist and
socialist
elements to
power.
Syria's
political
instability
during the years
after the 1954
coup, the
parallelism of
Syrian and
Egyptian
policies, and
the appeal of
Egyptian
President Gamal
Abdel Nasser's
leadership in
the wake of the
1956 Suez crisis
created support
in Syria for
union with
Egypt. On
February 1,
1958, the two
countries merged
to create the
United Arab
Republic, and
all Syrian
political
parties ceased
overt
activities.
The union was
not a success,
however.
Following a
military coup on
September 28,
1961, Syria
seceded,
reestablishing
itself as the
Syrian Arab
Republic.
Instability
characterized
the next 18
months, with
various coups
culminating on
March 8, 1963,
in the
installation by
leftist Syrian
Army officers of
the National
Council of the
Revolutionary
Command (NCRC),
a group of
military and
civilian
officials who
assumed control
of all executive
and legislative
authority. The
takeover was
engineered by
members of the
Arab Socialist
Resurrection
Party (Ba'ath
Party), which
had been active
in Syria and
other Arab
countries since
the late 1940s.
The new cabinet
was dominated by
Ba'ath members.
The Ba'ath
takeover in
Syria followed a
Ba'ath coup in
Iraq the
previous month.
The new Syrian
Government
explored the
possibility of
federation with
Egypt and Ba'ath--controlled
Iraq. An
agreement was
concluded in
Cairo on April
17, 1963, for a
referendum on
unity to be held
in September
1963. However,
serious
disagreements
among the
parties soon
developed, and
the tripartite
federation
failed to
materialize.
Thereafter, the
Ba'ath regimes
in Syria and
Iraq began to
work for
bilateral unity.
These plans
foundered in
November 1963,
when the Ba'ath
regime in Iraq
was overthrown.
In May 1964,
President Amin
Hafiz of the
NCRC promulgated
a provisional
constitution
providing for a
National Council
of the
Revolution
(NCR), an
appointed
legislature
composed of
representatives
of mass
organizations--labor,
peasant, and
professional
unions--a
presidential
council, in
which executive
power was
vested, and a
cabinet. On
February 23,
1966, a group of
army officers
carried out a
successful,
intra-party
coup, imprisoned
President Hafiz,
dissolved the
cabinet and the
NCR, abrogated
the provisional
constitution,
and designated a
regionalist,
civilian Ba'ath
government. The
coup leaders
described it as
a
"rectification"
of Ba'ath Party
principles. The
defeat of the
Syrians and
Egyptians in the
June 1967 war
with Israel
weakened the
radical
socialist regime
established by
the 1966 coup.
Conflict
developed
between a
moderate
military wing
and a more
extremist
civilian wing of
the Ba'ath
Party. The 1970
retreat of
Syrian forces
sent to aid the
PLO during the
"Black
September"
hostilities with
Jordan reflected
this political
disagreement
within the
ruling Ba'ath
leadership. On
November 13,
1970, Minister
of Defense Hafiz
al-Asad affected
a bloodless
military coup,
ousting the
civilian party
leadership and
assuming the
role of prime
minister.
1970 to
2000
Upon assuming
power, Hafiz al-Asad
moved quickly to
create an
organizational
infrastructure
for his
government and
to consolidate
control. The
Provisional
Regional Command
of Asad's Arab
Ba'ath Socialist
Party nominated
a 173-member
legislature, the
People's
Council, in
which the Ba'ath
Party took 87
seats. The
remaining seats
were divided
among "popular
organizations"
and other minor
parties. In
March 1971, the
party held its
regional
congress and
elected a new
21-member
Regional Command
headed by Asad.
In the same
month, a
national
referendum was
held to confirm
Asad as
President for a
7-year term. In
March 1972, to
broaden the base
of his
government, Asad
formed the
National
Progressive
Front, a
coalition of
parties led by
the Ba'ath
Party, and
elections were
held to
establish local
councils in each
of Syria's 14
governorates. In
March 1973, a
new Syrian
constitution
went into effect
followed shortly
thereafter by
parliamentary
elections for
the People's
Council, the
first such
elections since
1962.
The
authoritarian
regime was not
without its
critics, though
most were
quickly dealt
with. A serious
challenge arose
in the late
1970s, however,
from
fundamentalist
Sunni Muslims,
who reject the
basic values of
the secular
Ba'ath program
and object to
rule by the
Alawis, whom
they consider
heretical. From
1976 until its
suppression in
1982, the
archconservative
Muslim
Brotherhood led
an armed
insurgency
against the
regime. In
response to an
attempted
uprising by the
brotherhood in
February 1982,
the government
crushed the
fundamentalist
opposition
centered in the
city of Hama,
leveling parts
of the city with
artillery fire
and causing many
thousands of
dead and
wounded. Since
then, public
manifestations
of anti-regime
activity have
been very
limited.
Syria's 1990
participation in
the U.S.-led
multinational
coalition
aligned against
Saddam Hussein
marked a
dramatic
watershed in
Syria's
relations both
with other Arab
states and with
the West. Syria
participated in
the multilateral
Middle East
Peace Conference
in Madrid in
October 1991,
and during the
1990s engaged in
direct,
face-to-face
negotiations
with Israel.
These
negotiations
failed, and
there have been
no further
Syrian-Israeli
talks since
President Hafiz
Al-Asad's
meeting with
then President
Bill Clinton in
Geneva in March
2000.
Hafiz Al-Asad
died on June 10,
2000, after 30
years in power.
Immediately
following Al-Asad's
death, the
Parliament
amended the
constitution,
reducing the
mandatory
minimum age of
the President
from 40 to 34
years old, which
allowed his son,
Bashar Al-Asad
legally to be
eligible for
nomination by
the ruling
Ba'ath party. On
July 10, 2000,
Bashar Al-Asad
was elected
President by
referendum in
which he ran
unopposed,
garnering 97.29%
of the vote,
according to
Syrian
Government
statistics.
2000 to
2005
In the
aftermath of
September 11,
2001 the Syrian
Government began
limited
cooperation with
U.S. in the
global war
against
terrorism.
However, Syria
opposed the Iraq
war in March
2003, and
bilateral
relations with
the U.S. swiftly
deteriorated. In
December 2003,
President Bush
signed into law
the Syria
Accountability
and Lebanese
Sovereignty
Restoration Act
of 2003, which
provided for the
imposition of a
series of
sanctions
against Syria if
Syria did not
end its support
for Palestinian
terrorist
groups, end its
military and
security
presence in
Lebanon, cease
its pursuit of
weapons of mass
destruction, and
meet its
obligations
under United
Nations Security
Council
resolutions
regarding the
stabilization
and
reconstruction
of Iraq. In May
2004, the
President
determined that
Syria had not
met these
conditions and
implemented
sanctions that
prohibit the
export to Syria
of items on the
U.S. Munitions
List and
Commerce Control
List, the export
to Syria of U.S.
products except
for food and
medicine, and
the taking off
from or landing
in the United
States of Syrian
Government-owned
aircraft. At the
same time, the
U.S. Department
of the Treasury
announced its
intention to
order U.S.
financial
institutions to
sever
correspondent
accounts with
the Commercial
Bank of Syria
based on
money-laundering
concerns,
pursuant to
Section 311 of
the USA PATRIOT
Act. Acting
under the
International
Emergency
Economic Powers
Act (IEEPA), the
President also
authorized the
Secretary of the
Treasury, in
consultation
with the
Secretary of
State, to freeze
assets belonging
to certain
Syrian
individuals and
government
entities.
Tensions
between Syria
and the U.S.
intensified in
late 2004 and
2005, primarily
over issues
relating to Iraq
and Lebanon. The
U.S. Government
recalled its
Ambassador in
February 2005,
after the
assassination of
Lebanese Prime
Minister Hariri
and she had not
returned as of
October. Sensing
its
international
isolation, the
Syrians shored
up their
relations with
Iran and radical
Palestinians
groups based in
Damascus, and
cracked down on
any signs of
internal
dissent. There
has been little
sign of movement
on economic or
political
reform. The SARG
provided minimal
cooperation to
the UN
Independent
International
Investigation
Commission,
headed by Detlev
Mehlis, which
investigated the
killing of
Hariri.
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PRINCIPAL
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS: |
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President--Bashar Al-Asad
Vice President--vacant
Vice President--Muhammad Zuhayr
Mashariqa
Prime Minister--Muhammad Naji
Utri
Minister of Foreign
Affairs--Farouk Al-Shara' |
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TRAVEL &
BUSINESS INFORMATION: |
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Following are are
the top 10 tips you need to make
your trip easier:
1. Make sure you have a signed,
valid passport and visas, if
required. Also, before you go,
fill in the emergency
information page of your
passport!
2. Read the Consular Information
Sheets (and Public Announcements
or Travel Warnings, if
applicable) for the countries
you plan to visit.
3. Familiarize yourself with
local laws and customs of the
countries to which you are
travelling. While in a foreign country,
you are subject to its laws.
4. Make 2 copies of your
passport identification page.
This will facilitate replacement
if your passport is lost or
stolen. Leave one copy at home
with friends or relatives. Carry
the other with you in a separate
place from your passport.
5. Leave a copy of your
itinerary with family or friends
at home so that you can be
contacted in case of an
emergency.
6. Do not leave your luggage
unattended in public areas. Do
not accept packages from
strangers.
7. You should register with the
nearest embassy or consulate of
your country. Registration will
make your presence and
whereabouts known in case it is
necessary to contact you in an
emergency.
Remember to leave a detailed
itinerary and the numbers or
copies of your passport or other
citizenship documents with a
friend or relative in your own
country.
8. To avoid being a target of
crime, try not to wear
conspicuous clothing and
expensive jewelry and do not
carry excessive amounts of money
or unnecessary credit cards.
9. In order to avoid violating
local laws, deal only with
authorized agents when you
exchange money or purchase art
or antiques.
10. If you get into trouble,
contact the nearest embassy of
your country. |
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USEFUL
LINKS: |
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al-Bab - Syria -
Offers extensive links
to resources about the
country including the
media and news, travel,
maps, politics and
government, people,
economy and environment.
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Al-Sham - Syrian
portal includes a
directory and Arabic
chat site.
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Amnesty International
USA - Syria - News,
reports and success
stories for the country
including AI Annual
Report entries for the
past ten years.
[English, Spanish]
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Arab Bay.com -
Directory and search
engine for the Arab
world and for every Arab
country separately.
-
ArabNet - Syria -
Offers an overview with
information about the
country's history,
geography, business,
culture, government,
transport and tourism.
-
BBC News - Country
Profile: Syria -
Provides overview, key
facts and events,
timelines and leader
profiles along with
current news.
-
Cafe Syria -
Includes various
information about the
country.
-
CIA - The World
Factbook: Saudi Arabia
- Features map and brief
descriptions of the
geography, people,
government, economy,
communications,
transportation, military
and transnational
issues.
-
Columbia University
Libraries - Middle East
Studies: Syria -
Directory of categorized
links from the WWW-VL.
-
Hejlah - The Country and
People of Syria -
Provides general
information from the
Columbia University
Press along with a
directory of categorised
web links.
-
KacMac - Features a
directory and search
engine.
-
NationMaster - Syria
- Profile includes
information for various
aspects of the country,
with a special emphasis
on statistics and
rankings.
-
Syria Links -
Directory of Syrian
sites.
-
Syria Online -
Complete information
resources on the syrian
market place, companies,
trade, and society.
-
Syrian Websites -
One page site contains
links to Syrian sites.
-
UK Foreign Office -
Country Profiles: Syria
- Overview of country's
geography, history,
politics, economy,
international relations,
travel and current
affairs.
-
United Nations - Syria
- Official site provides
news and information on
the UN agencies, working
groups, staff and
operations. Includes
programmes database,
publications and
reports.
-
US Department of State -
Syria - Country
portal offers a map and
links to Background
Notes, USAID page, the
US embassy and the
current ambassador,
press releases, fact
sheets, annual Human
Rights Reports and other
major reports including
Country and Industry
Market Reports.
-
US Library of Congress -
Country Study: Syria
- April 1987 country
profile provides
information about its
historical setting,
society and environment,
economy, government and
politics, and national
security.
-
US Library of Congress -
Portals to the World:
Syria - Annotated
directory of selected
online resources.
-
Wikipedia - Syria -
Hyperlinked encyclopedia
article covers the
country's history,
government and politics,
geography, economy,
demographics, language
and culture.
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