In this article we will discuss Arab fountains that occurred throughout the Middle East and North Africa, or Arab riots of 2010 to 2011. We study the fundamental causes of Arab democratic uprisings in each country, the events that occurred during this period, and the aftermath of the Middle East / North African protest. I will also study the international relations between the leaders of the Middle East and the world leaders, especially the position taken by Western leaders during the uprising.
Arab Spring, or the Arab riot, is often defined as a series of protests in North Africa and the Middle East that began in December 2010 until the beginning of 2011. These protests are often said to include 'Arab' Spring 'Arab riot', 'Middle Eastern riot', 'Arab riot' or 'Arab revolution' (New York Times, 2011). Protests were also held in countries such as Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Bahrain, Yemen, Morocco and Saudi Arabia.
In the incandescent period of the Arab faction of 2011, the Arab world did not seem to be unified as it is now. The Tunisian revolution has clearly and strongly urged Arabs around the world to take them to the streets. Uprising in Egypt on 25th January led to the dismissal of Hosni Mubarak. He told Arab citizens and leaders that protestor's victory might succeed. The waves of subsequent protests are accompanied by significant synergistic effects and these synergistic effects can not reasonably be explained without reference to cross-border diffusion. Bahrainians, Yemenians, Jordan people tried to replicate attacks and long-term detention centers in Egypt's liberation plaza Arab world protesters shouted the same slogan and waved the same signs.
Arab Spring is a collective term for the uprising of various Arab countries in the Middle East. When the supplier of fruits committed suicide in Tunisia, the Arab spring began and he tried to express a difficult living environment under the dictatorship. Other countries that experienced a large revolution include, but are not limited to, Egypt, Libya and Syria. I think it has been successful in Tunisia and now has a new democratic constitution. On the other hand, in many other countries that are rebellious, Egypt - thought of Syria in Libya - but still led by dictatorship. Therefore, I think Arab Spring is generally failing, but in the future the country may still be a democratic country.