Essayer OR - Gratuit
'I haven't sold anything'
The Guardian
|January 05, 2026
Vineyard in limbo a year on from fall of Assad regime
Abu Ali spent the first hours after the toppling of the Syrian president Bashar al-Assad boxing up his merchandise.
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, the weathered tourist shop on the boardwalk of the coastal city of Tartous has entirely new products. 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 now it’s slowed down. We just 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 military influencers and Lebanese tourists - have disappeared. Only the faded Cyrillic on the storefront hints at the shop’s past hawking Assad regime wares.
A year after the fall of the 50-year Assad dynasty 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 bulldozed and the portraits of his son Bashar that were once plastered across every billboard, office and classroom now 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.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition January 05, 2026 de The Guardian.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Guardian
The Guardian
Draper and Raducanu eager to end bruising injury cycles
Britain's fragile frontrunners begin 2026 with persistent physical problems hindering their paths to the top
4 mins
January 07, 2026
The Guardian
‘It takes a town to raise a family’
The community sponsors who are helping to integrate refugees
4 mins
January 07, 2026
The Guardian
What's at stake The global interests and tensions that swirl round the territory
Why is Donald Trump so fixated on acquiring Greenland?
3 mins
January 07, 2026
The Guardian
'Glacial pace' Master of slow cinema perfected isolation
The semiofficial genre of “slow cinema” has been around for decades: glacial pacing, unhurried and unbroken takes, characters who appear to be looking - often wordlessly and unsmilingly - at people or things off camera or into the lens itself, the immobile silence accumulating into a transcendental simplicity.
2 mins
January 07, 2026
The Guardian
UK and France seal 'coalition' deal to send troops to postwar Ukraine
Britain and France have declared they are ready to deploy troops to Ukraine in the aftermath of a peace deal, a major new commitment that Russia is likely to block forcefully.
3 mins
January 07, 2026
The Guardian
Spot-on Gibbs-White damages West Ham survival hopes
For a while it seemed the only thing that Nottingham Forest were going to get right was show safe hands when West Ham passed them the Premier League’s crisis baton.
3 mins
January 07, 2026
The Guardian
Beijing response Will the shock US raid on Venezuela push China to go into Taiwan?
The sight of a hostile regional superpower launching an overnight raid to depose the leader of a smaller neighbouring country could easily have sent pulses in Taiwan racing.
3 mins
January 07, 2026
The Guardian
We can win back voters, No 10 tells ministers
The government must find ways to reconnect emotionally with voters, Keir Starmer’s chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, is said to have warned cabinet ministers in a meeting where the prime minister said they were in “the fight of our lives”.
6 mins
January 07, 2026
The Guardian
Archaeologists dig up ‘extraordinary’ trumpet that may have been used by Boudicca's warriors
An iron age war trumpet that may have links to the Celtic tribe led by Boudicca when they were fighting the Romans has been discovered by archaeologists.
3 mins
January 07, 2026
The Guardian
European leaders rally to support Greenland
European leaders have dramatically rallied together in support of Denmark and Greenland after one of Donald Trump's leading aides suggested the US might be willing to seize control of the Arctic territory by force.
4 mins
January 07, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
