Image caption Mohamed Bouazizi's mother and sister Leila (right) visited President Ben Ali at the end of December

Self-immolation is a rare form of political protest, but in the past few days a number of incidents of men setting themselves alight have been reported in North African countries - Algeria, Egypt and Mauritania.

These reports come in the wake of the self-immolation of 26-year-old Mohamed Bouazizi in Tunisia in December.

The fact that his protest against local authorities helped set off a popular revolt has prompted commentators to ask whether the incidents in the other countries, although isolated, were inspired by the Tunisian event and whether the protesters were aiming to set off a similar chain of events in their nations.

In Cairo on Monday, one man set himself alight outside the parliament building, while another set himself on fire in front of the presidential palace in Mauritania.

On Tuesday, it was reported that a second man had set himself on fire in Egypt, and up to seven men had either tried to or succeeded in setting fire to themselves in different towns across Algeria over a period of a few days, with one reported fatality.

Middle East commentator Blake Hounshell writing for Foreign Policy.com raised the prospect of a "new trend".

"There is something horrifying and, in a way, moving about these suicide attempts. It's a shocking, desperate tactic that instantly attracts attention, revulsion, but also sympathy."

Parallels

Clearly the self-immolation of Mohamed Bouazizi has resonated across the region.

Recent acts of protest 18 January: Man reported to have set himself alight near Egyptian parliament

17 January: Egyptian protesting against poor living conditions sets himself alight

17 January: A man torches himself in his car outside an official building in Mauritania's capital, Nouakchott

17 January: A fifth attempt at self-immolation in Algeria is recorded in less than a week. Two more unconfirmed reports a day later

17 December: Mohamed Bouazizi sets himself alight in a small town in Tunisia. He dies on 4 January

Egyptian blogger Hossam el-Hamalawy told the BBC that people had been comparing the Tunisian political situation with their own.

"There is great interest. The Egyptian people and the Egyptian public have been following the events in Tunisia with so much joy, since they can draw parallels between the Tunisian situation and their own," he said.

Speaking on Monday after the initial incident in Egypt, Mr el-Hamalawy said the government would try to paint the attempted suicide as an isolated political act by a mentally unstable individual.

Self-immolation as a public protest is rare in the Muslim world, says Dr Michael Biggs, a lecturer at the department of sociology at the University of Oxford, who has researched self-immolation as a political protest.

The few exceptions include a wave of self-immolations by Kurds in the late 1990s, but these took place in Europe rather than on their home territory.

Image caption Mohamed Bouazizi became a symbol for Tunisia's protest

According to Dr Biggs, over the past few decades, hundreds of people have sacrificed their lives in this kind of protest, including Vietnamese Buddhists, Lithuanian nationalists, South Korean leftists, upper-caste Indian students and Kurdish nationalists in Western Europe.

But he says it is "new in this part of the world".

Dr Biggs says that, in recent times, a more reported method of people sacrificing their lives in the Muslim world has been suicide bombings.

John L Esposito, professor of religion and international affairs and of Islamic studies at Georgetown University and author of the Future of Islam, says Arab countries are witnessing a new phenomenon.

"Historically for Muslims, the act of suicide has always been seen as wrong - in the same way that it has for Christians. But what is happening at the moment has taken on a type of different symbolism," he says.

Mohamed Bouazizi's act was being seen as a new expression of resistance.

"The situation for youths in these countries is depressing; the level of loss of sense of purpose is stunning.

Afghan women's despair Afghanistan has a particular problem of women committing suicide by setting fire to themselves to escape difficult lives. Self-immolation among women has the highest recorded levels in Herat province. Most of the women are in their teens or early 20s and are recently or soon-to-be married. Experts suggest that a combination of poverty, illiteracy, domestic violence and lack of freedoms continue to drive this decades-old trend.

"What we have seen in these parts are movements towards different forms of resistance, transcending the traditional cultural and religious norms."

Prof Esposito says that even some Islamic scholars will argue that such acts will not necessarily be seen as simply the taking of a life, but as a demonstration of protest against social injustice.

"The sense of social justice is strongly rooted in the Koran," he says.

Because Islam prohibits the cremation of bodies, the idea of people setting themselves on fire is all the more shocking.

The spectacle of a violent death in a public place can also have an enormous impact.

"It is a desperate political act but also a very effective one. For someone to do this, they are very committed, the injustices are so serious that it is a credible signal of how bad things really are," says Dr Biggs.

Mohamed Bouazizi's own story is likely to have a significant place in the mythology of his country.

"My brother is alive in all of us. He offered us so much, he opened many doors for us because we can smell democracy and freedom now," his sister Leila Bouazizi told the BBC Arabic service in an interview.

While there is no direct evidence that events in Tunisia triggered those in Algeria, Egypt and Mauritania, Dr Biggs says that, historically, such acts have often been clustered.

Monk's protest

Dr Biggs says the act of self-immolation as a symbol of resistance really began with the Vietnam War.

Photographer Malcolm Browne's picture of an elderly Buddhist monk, Thich Quang Duc, engulfed in flames as he burned himself to death in Saigon in 1963, has become one of the iconic images of the war.

Image caption People of what was then Czechoslovakia pay tribute at Wenceslas Square to Jan Palach in 1963

The initial self-immolation triggered a number of other such incidents by other monks, as well as self-immolations as far away as the US.

In 1965, Alice Herz, an 82-year-old pacifist, immolated herself on a Detroit street corner in an act of protest against the Vietnam War. This was followed by the suicide of Norman Morrison, who set fire to himself on the steps of the Pentagon.

"Herz and Morrison were not simply borrowing a form of protest that originated in Vietnam; they were deliberately re-enacting the fiery deaths of Buddhist monks in order to make the tragedy more immediate for the American public," says Dr Biggs.

And in 1969, a young university student named Jan Palach initiated the use of this form of protest against the Soviet Union, in an act of self-immolation in Wenceslas Square in Prague. Palach became a legend almost overnight and still has a significant place in Czech mythology.

A small wave of similar protests occurred elsewhere in communist Eastern Europe.

Death by fire as a form of protest is more prevalent in some countries, such as India, where it is relatively more common. In 1990, there was a massive wave of such suicides against affirmative action for lower-caste quotas.

Generally the response to such acts is one of horror but it is an act that also elicits sympathy, says Dr Biggs.

In many cases, he argues that "those rare individuals who were prepared to die for a collective cause knew that this sacrifice could have a tremendous impact".

In others, however, those who carry out this very personal form of protest can have little notion of what chain of events will follow.