Middle East & Africa | Falling apart

Is Syria’s drug-dealing dictator coming in from the cold?

Bashar al-Assad is less of a pariah, but cannot hold the country together

A displaced boy looks out from a hole in his classroom at a makeshift school, set-up in camp for internally displaced Syrians, in the village of Haranabush, Idlib province
Photograph: AFP
|Abu al-Zendayn

At first it seemed that the opening in August of the Abu al-Zendayn crossing between rebel- and regime-held territory within Syria might herald the reconnection of the fragments of the country. On a hill outside al-Bab, north of Aleppo, rebels, protected by Turkey, and regime forces, protected by Russia and Iran, pulled back the barbed wire. Syrians displaced in the north planned long-awaited visits home. They cheered the prospect of a reprieve from smugglers’ exorbitant tariffs. Foreign governments wondered if refugees might venture back home. But a day later, shells were flying and the crossing was once again closed.

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Falling apart”

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