April 26, 2010
Carel Pedre, one of Haiti's most popular radio broadcasters, was on the air hours after the Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake hit his country. He talks about life in Port-au-Prince and the surrounding areas more than three months after the quake.
Credit: Ivan Munoz Garcia/Oxfam International via Flickr
Residents clean up the Tapis Rouge camp, Port-au-Prince
Credit: Sophia Paris/United Nations Photo via Flickr
Impromptu Hospital, Port-au-Prince
Credit: United Nations Development Programme via Flickr
Tent city, Port-au-Prince
Credit: Senior Chief Spike Call/U.S. Army via Flickr
U.S. Army officials discuss plans for displacement camps
Credit: dalexfilms via Flickr
Passing out tarps to prepare for the rainy season
Credit: Sophia Paris/United Nations Photo via Flickr
Crowds mourning the dead in Port-au-Prince
Credit: AIDG via Flickr
AIDG masonry training, Port-au-Prince
Credit: AIDG via Flickr
AIDG masonry training, Port-au-Prince
Credit: Tech. Sgt. James L. Harper Jr./U.S. Air Force via Flickr
Haitians walk past rubble in Port-au-Prince
Credit: Oxfam via Flickr
Makeshift beauty shop in Delmas 48 camp
Credit: Oxfam via Flickr
Household items for sale at Delmas 48 camp
Credit: Sophia Paris/United Nations Photo via Flickr
A man sharpens his machete,Port-au-Prince's Petionville Club
Credit: Pasqual Gorriz/United Nations Photo via Flickr
A prayer service, Port-au-Prince
Credit: GAIN U.S.A. via Flickr
A child in Port-au-Prince
Credit: Jose Manuel Jimenez/IFRC via Flickr
Floods in southwest Haiti, Feb. 2010
Credit: IFRC via Flickr
A paramedic gives a child water
Credit: GAIN U.S.A. via Flickr
Haitian woman, Port-au-Prince