Forced Out Of Power, Read How Syria’s Assads Are Coping In Permanent Exile
By William Christou & Pjotr Sauer In 2011, a group of teenage boys spray-painted a warning on to a wall in their school playground: “It’s your turn, Doctor.” The graffiti was a thinly-veiled threat that Syria’s President, Bashar al-Assad, a London-trained ophthalmologist, would be next in the line of Arab dictators toppled by the then raging Arab spring. It took 14 years, during which 620,000 were killed and nearly 14 million displaced, but eventually the doctor’s turn came and Assad was deposed, fleeing to Moscow, Russia, in the middle of the night. But after relinquishing his dictatorship for a gilded…












