A man makes a purchase at a store in Camp Chavez in the Carrefour neighborhood. The original residents of Camp Chavez lived for over a year after the January 12, 2010 earthquake on a highway median on the Route des Rails in Carrefour. The residents re-named the neighborhood, now much more crowded with the original settlers probably in the minority, for Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez after his death.
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A man leaves the "showers" in Camp Chavez.
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Young women collect water at the central distribution point for the neighborhood.
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A young woman washes laundry in front of her home.
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A young woman washes laundry in front of her home.
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A young girl stands at the corner of her street.
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A young boy stands at the corner of his street.
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A young woman washes laundry in front of her home, attended by various children.
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A young sister and brother stand outside their home.
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A young woman stands against a wall with her phone at the ready.
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A young woman fries potatoes at her makeshift restaurant outside her home.
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A young boy carries a stack of fiberboard, the material the original houses in Camp Chavez were made of.
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Young boys play outside their houses.
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A young man stands on a street corner.
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A young girl and boy stand outside their home.
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Young boys play in front of a row of public toilets provided by a charity organization.
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Two young women stand in the doorway of a small shop on a main street.
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A young woman stands in front of a row of public toilets provided by a charity organization.
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A young man holds a voodoo skull for use in Carnival the following week outside a lottery shop on a main street.
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Neighbors gather on a corner as a woman cooks lunch and a man bathes in the middle of the street.
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Two young men pass the time by standing on a corner in Camp Chavez.
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A young woman laughs while sitting with her friend outside her house.
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A young woman stands on a point looking out at the polluted sea bordering Camp Chavez.
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