IFRC

Haiti - Three months after the earthquake

Two brothers share a pair of roller skates at Camp Rico in Leogane. (p-HTI0739)Photo: IFRC/Jose Manuel Jimenez

Two brothers share a pair of roller skates at Camp Rico in Leogane. (p-HTI0739)Photo: IFRC/Jose Manuel Jimenez

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Two brothers share a pair of roller skates at Camp Rico in Leogane. (p-HTI0739)Photo: IFRC/Jose Manuel Jimenez
A two-year-old boy with an amputated hand is fed by a volunteer in the General Hospital of Haiti. (p-HTI0738)Photo: IFRC/Jose Manuel Jimenez
A nineteen years old boy, whose leg has been amputated, plays with his mobile phone in a recovery area at the General Hospital of Haiti. (p-HTI0740)Photo: IFRC/Jose Manuel Jimenez
A woman is waiting for the start of a food distribution at Carrefour, Port-au-Prince. (p-HTI0746)Photo: IFRC/Jose Manuel Jimenez
A woman waits for a distribution organized by the Red Cross Red Crescent in Port-au-Prince. (p-HTI0741)Photo: IFRC/Jose Manuel Jimenez
Louis Theofane, 35, was trapped at a supermarket when the earthquake hit Port-au-Prince. She survived, but her brother didn’t. Now she lives at the Couronne camp. (p-HTI0742)Photo: IFRC/Jose Manuel Jimenez
A boy waits for his mother who has been at a distribution of shelter kits. (p-HTI0743)Photo: IFRC/Jose Manuel Jimenez
A girl in the recovery area at the General Hospital in Port-au-Prince. (p-HTI0744)Photo: IFRC/Jose Manuel Jimenez
A girl in the recovery area at the General Hospital in Port-au-Prince. (p-HTI0745)Photo: IFRC/Jose Manuel Jimenez
    

The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) is the world's largest humanitarian organization, with 187 member National Societies. As part of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, our work is guided by seven fundamental principles; humanity, impartiality, neutrality, independence, voluntary service, unity and universality. About this site & copyright