Thanks for downloading the documentary podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Tim Hewell.
In this edition of Assignment, I'm in Syria,
being offered a glass of tea on the outskirts of Damascus.
Thank you.
Some sugar, if there's anything.
We've just sat down in this room of bare breeze blocks.
So, basically, you had to move very fast, because it's a kind of half-built house.
Yes, there is nothing we can do.
No one ever thought the regime could fall after nearly 15 years.
So we had to move to this place that isn't even plastered,
doesn't even have an electricity connection.
It's the only place we could find to live.
Last December, Syria's streets filled with crowds,
celebrating the fall of dictator Bashar al-Assad.
A seemingly endless civil war was suddenly over in a flash after a lightning rebel advance on the capital.
Most Syrians watched with ever-mounting excitement.
But the man I'm sipping tea with was terrified.
After the rebels took Aleppo and then Hama and then Homs,
we were really nervous, especially all of us living in government accommodation compounds.