“Agle thokar se left ho jaana (turn left from the next speed-breaker).” These are the directions we are given for Shahpur camp after a dense foggy ride early in the morning. It’s quarter to eight when I finally reach Camp No. 1—Islamabad—the makeshift accommodation where many of the victims of the Muzaffarnagar riots are still staying. Sayeeda and her six children are sitting outside their tent, which is visibly damp with dew. They are gathered around a chulha to combat the cold. Some 18 children have already died across other camps due to the cold. The tarpaulin tents in open fields are feeble protection against the approaching winter for the hundreds of families compelled to live there. “Neend nahin aati (I can’t sleep),” Sayeeda’s five-year-old daughter Bhura tells me.