For decades Syria has been among the most stable countries in the Middle East.
Back in February 1982, a rising of Sunni Muslims in the town of Hama was savagely repressed by the current president’s father, Hafez al-Assad. Estimates vary but thousands were killed.
The death toll today after upheavals in a number of Syrian towns and cities is possibly in the low hundreds with many more injured – exact figures are hard to come by – but the regime still shows every bit as much tenacity in facing down its opponents.