The Victoria Derbyshire programme has been given rare access inside.
"We are always ready to escape, 24 hours a day we have our children ready," says Sara Khan, originally from Afghanistan.
"The violence means our little ones don't get to sleep."
Sara explains that her family spend all day queuing for food at the camp and all night ready to run - in fear of the fights that break out constantly.
Conditions are so appalling that charities have actually left in protest.
The place smells of raw sewage, and there are around 70 people per toilet, according to medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF).
Some people live in mobile cabins, but rammed in-between them all are tents and tarpaulin sheets - homes for those who cannot obtain any official living space.
The camp is also now sprawling into surrounding countryside. One tent houses 17 people - four families under one canvas.
There are currently more than 8,000 people crammed into Moria camp, which was supposed to house around 2,000
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