The country of Haiti was struck by a devastating earthquake on  January 12th of 2010. It is said the earthquake claimed the lives of  230.000 people and left a million homeless. The damage to the Haitian  infrastructure was immense with 250.000 residences and over 30.000  official buildings being destroyed. Communications were also in disarray  and as a result the relief effort was shambolic. As the magnitude of  the disaster became clear the rest of the World woke up and started  sending aid and personnel to Haiti. Countless charity events were  organised to raise money for the Haitian people and Presidents Clinton  and Bush Senior became involved. So much money was raised, more than $5  billion, that each displaced family could potentially be given a check  for $37,000. Now, 9 months later, only 2% of this money has actually  been released for projects helping the Haitian people, approximately 90%  of the rubble is still in need of clearing up and a milion people still  live in tents. Who is to blame? No one and everyone. Charities holding  on to the money, governments making promises and not keeping them and  the Haitian people, who seem to be waiting for someone else to clean up  the mess.

























2A  resident sells iron collected from buildings destroyed during an  earthquake in downtown Port-au-Prince. 

3Residents  get their hair tended to in a makeshift hair salon on a street in  downtown Port-au-Prince. 

4A  woman carries supplies, donated by the non-governmental organisation  World Vision, to combat the
 rainy season at a provisional camp set up at  the Canapevert zone in Port-au-Prince. 

5An  earthquake survivor receives medical support in a provisional camp set  up at the Petionville golf club
 in Port-au-Prince. 

6A resident looks at a makeshift stall downtown in Port-au-Prince. 

7A resident stands next to her belongings in downtown Port-au-Prince. 

8A solar-powered lamp is seen inside a provisional camp for earthquake victims in Port-au-Prince. 

9A  resident collects blocks, from buildings destroyed in an earthquake, to  sell in downtown Port-au-Prince. 

10Residents  sell products beside buildings destroyed during an earthquake in  downtown Port-au-Prince. (Photo: Eduardo Munoz/Reuters)

11A man travels on his wheelchair on the streets of Port-au-Prince.         

12Women  pass in front of burning garbage and debris from buildings destroyed by  an earthquake in 
Port-au-Prince. 

13Earthquake  survivors are seen at camp set up at the Delmas 33 zone at the site  where a tree collapsed 
over tents last week due to heavy rains in  Port-au-Prince.

14A  woman carries supplies during a distribution of supplies donated by the  Haitian government to help
 residents combat the rainy season in  Port-au-Prince. 

15A boy walks past presidential candidate posters in Port-au-Prince.

16An  earthquake survivor fixes his tent after it collapsed last week after  rains in Port-au-Prince, at a camp
 set up near the Toussaint Louverture  International Airport. 

17An  earthquake survivor fixes his shelter, after the structure collapsed  last week due to rain, at a camp set
 up in the airport zone in  Port-au-Prince. 

18A  woman carries drinks to sell while walking during a drizzle at a  provisional camp set up at the
 Petionville golf club in Port-au-Prince. 

19Earthquake survivors play cards at a camp set up at the
 Petionville zone in Port-au-Prince. 

20A  man stands in a puddle with his crutches while waiting to cross the  street at downtown Port-au-Prince. 

21A  woman styles her hair with curlers as business carries on in a  hairdressing salon at Port-au-Prince. 

22Women pass a cathedral, which was damaged after the earthquake, in Port-au-Prince.

23An  earthquake victim carries a bucket with water in the destroyed  neighborhood of 
Fort-Liberte in Port-au-Prince. 

24A view of the destroyed neighborhood of Fort-Liberte in Port-au-Prince. (Photo: Eduardo Munoz/Reuters)

25Tania  Lalanne, 26, who lost six relatives during the earthquake, 
walks over  what was her house in the destroyed neighborhood of Fort-Liberte in  Port-au-Prince.


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