
At last, Syrians enjoy mouth-watering fruits of freedom
DAMASCUS: Once, if you saw what looked like a pineapple in a Damascus market, it was more likely to be a hand grenade. Now, after decades of poverty and repression under the Assad dynasty, imported fruit is making mouths water again.
Before Bashar Assad was ousted last December, pineapples, kiwis and mangoes were available only on the black market, and only to Syria's wealthiest. 'We used to smuggle them in from Lebanon with the help of taxi drivers, like petrol and diesel,' said Marwan Abu Hayla, 46, a fruit seller at Shaalan market in the Syrian capital. 'Now we can put them on display. The era of pineapple-phobia is over.'
Prices have also plunged. Another fruit seller, Ahmed Al-Hareth, 45, said bananas used to cost the equivalent of a public employee's monthly salary. Now a kilo of pineapple is down from 300,000 Syrian pounds, about $23, to $4.
One practical problem remains. 'Pineapple is for everyone,' said medical student Nour Abed Al-Jabbar. 'Even if some people don't know how to peel it.'
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