in moria village today, we could find only one person who was willing to talk to us. 's lived here all his life. but as the camp grew, so did divisions within the village. some were making money letting their fields to the government or ngos to house the refugees. 0thers felt swamped as migrants at times outnumbered villagers by a factor of more than ten. 0n the night of the blaze, panagiotis called the fire brigade, who initially told him they were busy with other fires elsewhere on the island. you know this area, you know how fires — there've been fires here before, you've seen them happen — do you think this could have been an accident? no, no accident, no—no, no. if locals were somehow involved in the fire, people here will almost certainly know about it. and if so, they're not saying. less than two miles from moria village, thousands of refugees are still camped out by the side of the road. they've been here for days now — without shelter, without sanitation or proper access to food and water. nearby, a new camp is being built. some refugees are already moving in.