Facebook Pixel {العنوان: سلسلة} | {اسم المغناطيس: سلسلة} - {الفئة: سلسلة} - اقرأ هذه القصة على Magzter.com

يحاول ذهب - حر

After Assad, businesses negotiate a shifting landscape

January 09, 2026

|

The Guardian Weekly

Abu Ali spent the first hours after the toppling of the Syrian president Bashar al-Assad boxing up his merchandise.

- By William Christou DAMASCUS

After Assad, businesses negotiate a shifting landscape

Old-regime bumper stickers, mugs with Assad’s face, T-shirts on which Russian and Syrian flags faded into each other - it all had to go.

A year later, in the weathered tourist shop on the boardwalk of the Syrian coastal city of Tartous, the shelves are lined with the new three-star Syrian flag, mother-of-pearl jewellery boxes engraved with revolutionary slogans, and pictures of rebel fighters killed during the country’s 14-year civil war.

“Business is slow these days. Tourists and travellers used to come before but it’s slowed down. We need more security and things will improve,” said Ali, 48, the owner of the shop.

Ali’s old customers - Russian soldiers from nearby military bases, American war influencers and Lebanese tourists - have disappeared.

Just over a year since the 50-year-long Assad dynasty’s fall and its replacement by an Islamist-led government, Syrians are renegotiating the symbols and culture that once defined their country. Statues of Hafez al-Assad have been toppled and the portraits of his son, Bashar, once plastered across every billboard, office and classroom, survive only as defaced remnants, if at all.

The pace of change has been blistering. The sudden collapse of the Orwellian security apparatus that controlled all facets of life and the arrival of the new government has left Syria in a state of cultural flux.

المزيد من القصص من The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

The first lesson of war is 'know your enemy' - the UK's now is Trump

The conduct of the unjustified, illegal US-Israel war against Iran grows ever-more disproportionate, dishonourable and deranged. The torpedoing of an Iranian navy ship off Sri Lanka by a US submarine demonstrated that for reckless Donald Trump, the whole world is his battlefield.

time to read

3 mins

March 13, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

After Nasa's surprise, private firms still aim for the moon

It was shaping up into another ordinary day at the Colorado headquarters of the small space startup Lunar Outpost late last month when its chief executive, Justin Cyrus, learned of a surprise press conference called by Jared Isaacman, the new administrator of Nasa.

time to read

3 mins

March 13, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

She's fired! Noem learns that everyone is expendable in Trump world

Kristi Noem once led a dog to a gravel pit and ended its life with the cold precision of a mafia hit.

time to read

2 mins

March 13, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Why the jury is still out on teen social media ban

As the UK becomes the latest country to consider following Australia's lead on a social media ban for teenagers, a question Australians are repeatedly being asked is: how is it going?

time to read

2 mins

March 13, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Skin deep: what's the trick to mastering perfectly crispy fish?

When I fry fish, the skin never goes crisp, and instead sticks, rips or goes limp.

time to read

2 mins

March 13, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Sing out Mozart with meatballs in a suburban Ikea store

In an attempt to attract new audiences and save money, opera companies are putting performances on in the unlikeliest of places. It often works

time to read

3 mins

March 13, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

'One of the last standing' - Is the passion for taxonomy dying out?

Art Borkent has spent much of his life documenting endangered species. Only recently did it occur to him that he may have become one himself

time to read

5 mins

March 13, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Quit ChatGPT - your subscription bankrolls authoritarianism

OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is on track to lose $14bn this year. Its market share is collapsing, and its own CEO, Sam Altman, has admitted it \"screwed up\" an element of the product.

time to read

3 mins

March 13, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

The Guardian Weekly

Walks of life: New hiking routes blaze a trail for conservation

Follow the yellow footprints along Brazil's newest long-distance trail, and they will take you through lush forests and sandy shrubland, past sweeping vistas and bizarre rock formations, into grottos and rural communities.

time to read

3 mins

March 13, 2026

The Guardian Weekly

Mojtaba Khamenei: New leader is a supreme insider - but also a mystery

Crowds in Tehran greeted the announcement of the country's new supreme leader by chanting: “God's hand is still upon us, Khamenei is still our leader.”

time to read

3 mins

March 13, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size