A timeline of key developments since 2011 in the conflict in Syria
OTTAWA — The conflict in Syria has killed hundreds of thousands of people, displaced millions more, helped to destabilize the region and spurred a refugee crisis in Europe. Here is a chronology of how it all came about:
2000: British-trained doctor Bashar Assad succeeds his father, Haffaz Assad, as president of Syria, extending a family dictatorship dating back to 1970.
2011: The Arab Spring topples regimes in Tunisia and Egypt. Peaceful protests begin in Syria, but the Assad’s government responds with a harsh crackdown, killing hundreds. The United States and the European Union impose sanctions. A coalition of Syrian opposition groups establishes the Syrian National Council, vowing to topple Assad and introduce democracy. The Arab League suspends Syria’s membership.
2012: