CAIRO, Egypt - Protesters set themselves on fire in Egypt, Mauritania and Algeria on Monday in apparent copycat self-immolation attempts inspired by the act that helped trigger a popular uprising in Tunisia.
The incidents, while isolated, reflect the growing despair among the public of many Arab regimes resisting reform. They are deeply symbolic means of protest in a region that has little or no tolerance for dissent.
It was the self-immolation of a 26-year-old unemployed man in Tunisia last month that sparked the tidal wave of protests that toppled President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali last week.
Ben Ali ruled with an iron fist for 23 years, time spent in the company of similarly authoritarian rulers across much of the Arab world like Libya's Moammar Gadhafi, in power since 1969, Egypt's Hosni Mubarak, in office since 1981, and Yemen's Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has ruled that impoverished nation since he seized power more than 30 years ago.
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The stunning collapse of the Tunisian leader drew a litany of calls for change elsewhere in the Arab world, but activists faced the reality of vast security forces heavily vested in the status quo and hard-line regimes that crack down on dissent.
The men who have set themselves alight in recent days appeared to be inspired by the self-immolation of Tunisian Mohamed Bouazizi, a university graduate whose fruit and vegetable stand was confiscated by police because it had no permit.
His death touched a nerve with educated, unemployed youths in the North African country, prompting the mass protests that toppled Ben Ali.
Self-immolation as a method of protest is uncommon in the Arab world, where many associate it with protesters in the Far East or the Indian subcontinent. But Egyptian women in rural or poor urban areas have been known to set themselves on fire to protest violent husbands, abusive parents or an unwanted suitor.
Frustration over high unemployment, soaring food prices and a lack of democratic reform has echoed in Egypt and elsewhere in the region where governments face similar complaints.
The 48-year-old owner of a small restaurant who set himself on fire outside the parliament building Monday in central Cairo was angry about a government policy preventing restaurant owners from buying cheap subsidized bread to resell to their patrons, according to security officials at the scene.
He escaped with only light burns on his neck, face and legs after policemen guarding the building and motorists used fire extinguishers to put out the blaze engulfing him.
Also Monday, a Mauritanian man reportedly unhappy with the government torched himself in his car outside an official building in the capital, Nouakchott. Foreign ministry official Adbou Ould Sidi said police rushed 43-year-old Yacoub Ould Dahoud to the hospital.
In Algeria, local officials who declined to be identified said one man suffering a chronic illness set himself on fire Monday in Ghardaia in a dispute over medical costs and was hospitalized with burns. Passers-by in Mascara, meanwhile, stopped a fishmonger who had poured gasoline on himself and tried to set himself alight.
That raised to seven the number of reported cases in seven Algerian towns since Saturday.
Analysts said it was difficult to predict whether the practice could spread among the overwhelming Muslim majority inhabiting the Arab world, whose faith prohibits suicide.
But the incidents in Egypt, Algeria and Mauritania are symptomatic of a people close to giving up on hope of better economic lives or more freedoms.

