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Bashar al-Assad: Birthday

President of Syria
Born: September 11, 1965

Bashar al-Assad, born on September 11, 1965, is a Syrian politician who has been a prominent figure in the country’s political landscape. He hails from the al-Assad family, which has ruled Syria since 1971.

Assad studied medicine at Damascus University and later pursued further studies in ophthalmology in London. His elder brother, Basil, was initially groomed to succeed their father, Hafez al-Assad, as president, but after Basil’s untimely death in a car accident in 1994, Bashar was thrust into the political limelight. Following his father’s death in 2000, Bashar al-Assad assumed the presidency.

His presidency has been marked by both domestic and international controversies. In 2011, Syria became embroiled in a brutal civil war, with Assad’s government accused of widespread human rights abuses. This conflict has resulted in hundreds of thousands of deaths and a massive refugee crisis.

Assad’s regime has been criticized for its authoritarianism and alleged use of chemical weapons against civilians. He has managed to cling to power with support from Russia and Iran while facing opposition from various rebel groups and Western nations.

Bashar al-Assad’s presidency has been defined by conflict, instability, and allegations of human rights violations, making him a highly polarizing figure on the global stage.

Bashar al-Assad’s 5 most popular quotes

  • It’s very simple ; once the Western countries stop supporting those terrorists and making pressure on their puppet countries and client states like Saudi Arabia and Turkey and others, you’ll have no problem in Syria. It will be solved easily.
  • Foreigners cannot bring freedom, cannot bring democracy, because this is related to the culture, to the different factors that affect or influence that society. You cannot bring it, you cannot import it.
  • In Great Britain, an author published a book in which he claimed that Jesus Christ had children. Such statements don’t trigger civil unrest and bloodshed in Europe. But write similar statements about Islam in Syria and you might see bloody uprisings.
  • There is no such things as “Islamic terrorism,” because terrorism differs from Islam. There’s just terrorism, not Islamic terrorism. But the term “Islamic terrorism” has become widespread.
  • The only one who can fight for these values like democracy and freedoms are the people of any country or any society, not the foreigners.
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