Compare Hotel Online , Free Hotels  Rates Comparison Tool

 

Select Language
Syrian Arab Republic Hotel Compare price for free. 700,000+ hotels in 200 Countries Worldwide.
Get Lowest Rates!! before booking by compare all Hotels from top travel websites .
Home            About Us           Destinations          Search by Hotel Name          How does it work           Travel Links          Contact Us

Home
Browse by Country
Search by Hotel Name
How does it work
Travel Links
About Us
Contact Us

1. Enter your city and travel dates.

2. Receive a listing of hotels for your city. You can order the results by popularity, star rating, location, consumer ratings and price. You can view prices in the currency of your destination or in your local currency, as well as select from a list of major global currencies.

3. Select your hotel and view the hotel's details including descriptions, photos, reviews and maps.

4. View rates from multiple hotel reservation websites and suppliers to compare prices.

5. Use the best priced reservation supplier for your preferred hotel to make a direct reservation. Click on the "Select" button, you will get redirected to the suppliers' website to book directly.

Free Syrian Arab Republic Hotel Compare Prices

SEARCH SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC HOTELS AND COMPARE PRICES
Hotels Combined Rate Comparison

Syria (الجمهوريّة العربيّة السّوريّة Al-Jumhuriya al-`Arabiya as-Suriya, the Syrian Arab Republic) is one of the larger states of the Middle East and has its capital in Damascus. Syria is bordered to the north by Turkey, to the east by Iraq, by Jordan and Israel to the south, and by Lebanon to the south-west. In addition, the country has a short coastline on the east Mediterranean Sea.

Understand

Syria has a population of 17.8 million people (UN, 2003), of which 6 million are concentrated in the capital Damascus. A moderately large country (185,180 sq km or 72,150 sq miles), Syria is situated centrally within the Middle East region and has land borders with Turkey in the north, with Israel and Lebanon in the south, and with Iraq and Jordan in the east and south-east respectively.

The population of Syria is predominately Arab (90%), with large minorities from other ethnic groups: Kurds, Armenians, Circassians and Turks. The official language is Arabic, but other tongues that are occasionally understood include Kurdish, Armenian, Turkish, French and English. The Syrian Republic is officially secular, but in nonetheless greatly influenced by the majority religion of Islam (90% of the population, split between 74% Sunni Muslim and 16% other Muslim). There is a large Christian minority that amounts to about 10% of the population.

The President of Syria is Bashar al-Assad, who replaced his father Hafez al-Assad soon after his death on 10 June 2000. Having studied to become an opthalmologist (eye doctor) in Damascus and London, Bashar was groomed for the presidency after the 1994 car accident of his elder brother Basil. As a consequence, he joined the army and became colonel in 1999. Bashar's modernising credentials were somewhat boosted by his role in a domestic anti-corruption drive. More recently, however, Bashar's style of leadership has more closely come to resemble that of his father as an non-democratically elected and autocratic ruler, after an initial period of increased openness. Bashar's position as head of the Syrian state rests on his presidency of the Baath Party and his command-in-chief of the army. A "cult of personality" is widely promoted for Bashar Assad and his late father - their images are to be seen everywhere in the streets of Syria.

Assad's regime and the Baath Party own or control the vast majority of Syria's media. Criticism of the president and his family is not permitted and the press (both foreign and domestic) are heavily censored for material deemed threatening or embarrassing to the government. A brief period of relative press freedom arose after Bashar became president in 2000 and saw the licensing of the first private publications in almost 40 years. A later crackdown, however, imposed a range of restrictions regarding licensing and content. In a more relaxed manner (perhaps owing more to the fact that these matters are largely beyond possible government control), many Syrians have gained access to foreign television broadcasts (usually via satellite) as well as the three state-run networks. In 2002 the government set out conditions for licensing private, commercial FM radio stations, ruling at the same time, however, that radio stations could not broadcast news or political content.

  BROWSE BY CITY

 

 


Home            About Us           Browse by Country          Search by Hotel Name          How does it work           Travel Links         Contact Us
Copyright © 2009. eHotel Compare. All rights reserved.