doctor mufaddal hamadeh, welcome to hardtalk, thanks for being with us.nk you very much, thanks for hosting me. you visited idlib in late january, how would you describe what you saw there? i'm originally from idlib. i was born in idlib in 1959 — i gave away my age quickly — and i know idlib very well because i visited idlib many times after that. idlib used to be a very small, quiet, boring town. i never used to like going there with my parents. i was very excited to visit idlib this time, contrary to my previous visits. but idlib is a different place today, totally different. it transformed to a very busy city. it is very crowded. most of the people who are in idlib now are not originally from idlib, they have been displaced from other towns and other cities, like damascus, so idlib transformed itself from almost 100,000, you know, inhabitants to almost overi million now. so effectively there isn't enough room for people to have shelter. no, actually yeah. the thing that struck me the most when i'm visiting the hospitals and the clinics we have there in