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Protesters gather outside Tunisia's government palace in Tunis on Jan. 23, 2011. Mediators of the National Dialogue Quartet wonthe 2015 Nobel Peace Prize for helping to create the only democracy to emerge from the Arab Spring.
Protesters gather outside Tunisia’s government palace in Tunis on Jan. 23, 2011. Mediators of the National Dialogue Quartet wonthe 2015 Nobel Peace Prize for helping to create the only democracy to emerge from the Arab Spring.
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The Nobel Peace Prize announced Friday pointed to the relative success of Tunisia in building toward democracy after a 2011 uprising ousted a longtime dictator. That makes it a resounding exception among the nations of the Arab Spring revolts. The award went to four civil society organizations that make up the Tunisian National Dialogue Quartet, which helped guide the North African nation through some its direst moments by bringing Islamists and their opponents into negotiations. Tunisia’s transition to democracy has been battered by a weak economy, terrorist attacks and bickering politicians, but it was able to avert the violent civil breakdown that many had feared. Here is a glance at the other major Arab uprisings of 2011 and where they stand today:

EGYPT

Inspired by the events in Tunisia, Egyptians were next to take to the streets, with millions participating in protests that led to the Feb. 11, 2011, removal of Hosni Mubarak, the U.S. ally who had ruled Egypt for 29 years with an authoritarian grip.

After his fall, the military stepped into rule, until the country’s first-ever free elections in 2012 created a parliament dominated by the Muslims Brotherhood and other Islamists, and a prominent Brotherhood figure, Mohammed Morsi, won the presidency.

On the year anniversary of Morsi’s election, gigantic protests demanding his removal were held around the country, and on July 3, 2013, the military — then led by army chief Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi — removed Morsi. The ensuing crackdown on Islamists has been bloody, with hundreds killed and thousands jailed. Islamic terrorist violence is on the rise, and al-Sisi’s government has been accused of implementing oppressive policies reminiscent of the Mubarak-era.

SYRIA

Syria’s uprising took the most horrific turn of any of the Arab Spring nations: a civil war that has killed more than 250,000 lost lives and driven 12 million people — nearly half the pre-war population— from their homes. Much of the country is in the hands of the radical Islamic State terrorist group, Syrian refugees have overwhelmed neighboring nations, and tens of thousands of Syrians have migrated to Europe this year.

After early efforts to remove President Bashar Assad from power through peaceful protests, the government responded with a heavy hand, and the protests turned into an armed uprising and, eventually, a brutal civil war.

The indiscriminate use of chemical weapons and barrel bombs further led to the radicalization of a segment of the country’s population. Sectarian hatreds have been fanned.

All the while, Assad maintains his grip on his core territory, including the capital Damascus.

LIBYA

It took a civil war to oust Libyan dictator Moammar Khadafy, who after months of fighting with rebels was ousted and killed in mid-2011. Ever since, the country has slid into greater and greater chaos. Rebel factions turned into local militias that never gave up their weapons and carved out power centers of their own, while the central government never gained authority, and the military and police were never rebuilt.

YEMEN

It took nearly a year of protests for Yemenis to oust their long-serving President Ali Abdullah Saleh. Neighboring Gulf countries finally brokered a deal that granted him amnesty if he stepped down, allowing his vice president, Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, to take over.

But the years that followed have been marred in political instability, violence and now war.

BAHRAIN

Protests in Bahrain, a staunch American ally and home to the U.S. Fifth Fleet, erupted days after Egyptians overthrew Mubarak, with the nation’s Shiite majority calling for greater equality and representation in the government and the public sector. King Hamad, a Sunni in the Arab Gulf’s only Shiite-majority nation, maintained his authority, often through harsh crackdowns. Dozens of people were killed and hundreds more wounded in protests around Pearl Roundabout in March 2011 when Saudi Arabian tanks rolled over the causeway into the island kingdom to bolster the king.

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