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  • RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – MARCH 6, 2011: Revelers on the metro on the way to a street carnival in Rio de Janeiro.
    12-HM-Simon-Plestenjak-06.JPG
  • RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – MARCH 6, 2011: Revelers on the metro on the way to a street carnival in Rio de Janeiro.
    12-HM-Simon-Plestenjak-02.JPG
  • RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – MARCH 6, 2011: Revelers on the metro on the way to a street carnival in Rio de Janeiro.
    12-HM-Simon-Plestenjak-07.JPG
  • RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – MARCH 6, 2011: Revelers on the metro on the way to a street carnival in Rio de Janeiro.
    12-HM-Simon-Plestenjak-04.JPG
  • RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – MARCH 6, 2011: Revelers on the metro on the way to a street carnival in Rio de Janeiro.
    12-HM-Simon-Plestenjak-01.JPG
  • RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – MARCH 6, 2011: Revelers on the metro on the way to a street carnival in Rio de Janeiro.
    12-HM-Simon-Plestenjak-05.JPG
  • RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – MARCH 6, 2011: Revelers on the metro on the way to a street carnival in Rio de Janeiro.
    12-HM-Simon-Plestenjak-03.JPG
  • In this photo taken May 5, 2011, a sex worker dances as she waits for customers at Vila Mimosa prostitution zone in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
Spelling the possible end of Vila Mimosa is a high-speed train the government wants to build to link Rio to Sao Paulo, as part of Brazil's Olympic proposal. The government is expected to open bidding to prospective builders July 29.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-28.JPG
  • In this photo taken May 11, 2011, Carolina, 23, waits for customers at Vila Mimosa prostitution zone in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
Spelling the possible end of Vila Mimosa is a high-speed train the government wants to build to link Rio to Sao Paulo, as part of Brazil's Olympic proposal. The government is expected to open bidding to prospective builders July 29.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-19.JPG
  • In this photo taken May 25, 2011, Dara, second right, drinks with a customer as other sex workers get ready at the Vila Mimosa prostitution zone in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
Spelling the possible end of Vila Mimosa is a high-speed train the government wants to build to link Rio to Sao Paulo, as part of Brazil's Olympic proposal. The government is expected to open bidding to prospective builders July 29.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-27.JPG
  • In this photo taken May 5, 2011, a sex worker enters a cubicle where she sees her clients at Vila Mimosa prostitution zone in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
Spelling the possible end of Vila Mimosa is a high-speed train the government wants to build to link Rio to Sao Paulo, as part of Brazil's Olympic proposal. The government is expected to open bidding to prospective builders July 29.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-20.JPG
  • Ludmila Moura, 5, who was pulled out of her destroyed house by her father Marcelo, sits on a mattress at a shelter for people displaced by landslides in Nova Friburgo, Brazil, Sunday, Jan. 16, 2011. <br />
<br />
A series of flash floods and mudslides struck several cities in Rio de Janeiro State, destroying houses, roads and more. More than 900 people are reported to have been killed and over 300 remain missing in this, Brazil’s worst-ever natural disaster.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-43.JPG
  • In this photo taken May 5, 2011, Chauanda, 20, poses for a photo inside a cubicle where she sees her clients at the Vila Mimosa prostitution zone in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
Spelling the possible end of Vila Mimosa is a high-speed train the government wants to build to link Rio to Sao Paulo, as part of Brazil's Olympic proposal. The government is expected to open bidding to prospective builders July 29.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-29.JPG
  • In this photo taken May 5, 2011, a sex worker dances with a customer at the Vila Mimosa prostitution zone in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
Spelling the possible end of Vila Mimosa is a high-speed train the government wants to build to link Rio to Sao Paulo, as part of Brazil's Olympic proposal. The government is expected to open bidding to prospective builders July 29.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-30.JPG
  • This photo taken May 4, 2011 shows sex workers dancing as they wait for customers at the Vila Mimosa prostitution zone in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
Spelling the possible end of Vila Mimosa is a high-speed train the government wants to build to link Rio to Sao Paulo, as part of Brazil's Olympic proposal. The government is expected to open bidding to prospective builders July 29.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-25.JPG
  • In this photo taken May 8, 2011, a sex worker poses for a photo in her cubicle at the Vila Mimosa prostitution zone in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
Spelling the possible end of Vila Mimosa is a high-speed train the government wants to build to link Rio to Sao Paulo, as part of Brazil's Olympic proposal. The government is expected to open bidding to prospective builders July 29.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-24.JPG
  • A sex worker talks to a customers at Vila Mimosa prostitution zone in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Thursday, May 4, 2011. <br />
<br />
Spelling the possible end of Vila Mimosa is a high-speed train the government wants to build to link Rio to Sao Paulo, as part of Brazil's Olympic proposal. The government is expected to open bidding to prospective builders July 29.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-23.JPG
  • Wearing face masks to prevent infections, a man stand next to coffins containing bodies of landslides victim at a cemetery in Nova Friburgo, Brazil, Saturday, Jan. 15, 2011. <br />
<br />
A series of flash floods and mudslides struck several cities in Rio de Janeiro State, destroying houses, roads and more. More than 900 people are reported to have been killed and over 300 remain missing in this, Brazil’s worst-ever natural disaster.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-36.JPG
  • In this photo taken May 25, 2011, A sex worker waits for customers at the Vila Mimosa prostitution zone in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
Spelling the possible end of Vila Mimosa is a high-speed train the government wants to build to link Rio to Sao Paulo, as part of Brazil's Olympic proposal. The government is expected to open bidding to prospective builders July 29.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-26.JPG
  • Break, left, tattoos a man, center, as sex workers wait for customers at Vila Mimosa prostitution zone in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Thursday, May 8, 2011. <br />
<br />
Spelling the possible end of Vila Mimosa is a high-speed train the government wants to build to link Rio to Sao Paulo, as part of Brazil's Olympic proposal. The government is expected to open bidding to prospective builders July 29.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-22.JPG
  • Cris, 48, touches up her makeup as she waits for customers at Vila Mimosa prostitution zone in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Thursday, May 23, 2011.<br />
<br />
Spelling the possible end of Vila Mimosa is a high-speed train the government wants to build to link Rio to Sao Paulo, as part of Brazil's Olympic proposal. The government is expected to open bidding to prospective builders July 29.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-21.JPG
  • People leave flowers after a burial of a landslide victim in Teresopolis, Brazil, Friday, Jan. 14, 2011. <br />
<br />
A series of flash floods and mudslides struck several cities in Rio de Janeiro State, destroying houses, roads and more. More than 900 people are reported to have been killed and over 300 remain missing in this, Brazil’s worst-ever natural disaster.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-39.JPG
  • Aerial view of houses damaged by landslides in Nova Friburgo, Brazil, Sunday, Jan. 16, 2011.<br />
<br />
A series of flash floods and mudslides struck several cities in Rio de Janeiro State, destroying houses, roads and more. More than 900 people are reported to have been killed and over 300 remain missing in this, Brazil’s worst-ever natural disaster.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-38.JPG
  • Firefighters, National force and residents recover the body of a landslide victim from a house where they found 8 family members in Nova Friburgo, Brazil, Thursday, Jan. 20, 2011. <br />
<br />
A series of flash floods and mudslides struck several cities in Rio de Janeiro State, destroying houses, roads and more. More than 900 people are reported to have been killed and over 300 remain missing in this, Brazil’s worst-ever natural disaster.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-37.JPG
  • Roberta Machado Correia, a landslide survivor attends the funeral of a friend in Teresopolis, Brazil, Thursday, Jan. 13, 2011<br />
<br />
A series of flash floods and mudslides struck several cities in Rio de Janeiro State, destroying houses, roads and more. More than 900 people are reported to have been killed and over 300 remain missing in this, Brazil’s worst-ever natural disaster.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-34.JPG
  • Remaining of a church is seen after a landslide in Teresopolis, Brazil, Thursday, Jan. 13, 2011. <br />
<br />
A series of flash floods and mudslides struck several cities in Rio de Janeiro State, destroying houses, roads and more. More than 900 people are reported to have been killed and over 300 remain missing in this, Brazil’s worst-ever natural disaster.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-32.JPG
  • A rescue worker and a dog of the K-9 de Creixell O.N.G, from Spain, search for landslide victims in Nova Friburgo, Brazil, Thursday, Jan. 20, 2011.<br />
<br />
A series of flash floods and mudslides struck several cities in Rio de Janeiro State, destroying houses, roads and more. More than 900 people are reported to have been killed and over 300 remain missing in this, Brazil’s worst-ever natural disaster.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-40.JPG
  • A man checks a notebook found near the body of Samara Coelho da Silva, 13, after removing her from an area afected by a landslide at Prainha neighborhood in Nova Friburgo, Brazil, Monday, Jan. 17, 2011. <br />
<br />
A series of flash floods and mudslides struck several cities in Rio de Janeiro State, destroying houses, roads and more. More than 900 people are reported to have been killed and over 300 remain missing in this, Brazil’s worst-ever natural disaster.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-35.JPG
  • A landslide victim is lays next to debris in Teresopolis, Brazil, Thursday, Jan. 13, 2011.<br />
<br />
A series of flash floods and mudslides struck several cities in Rio de Janeiro State, destroying houses, roads and more. More than 900 people are reported to have been killed and over 300 remain missing in this, Brazil’s worst-ever natural disaster.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-33.JPG
  • A car, dragged inside a church by a mudslide, is seen in Nova Friburgo, Brazil, Friday, Jan. 21, 2011. <br />
<br />
A series of flash floods and mudslides struck several cities in Rio de Janeiro State, destroying houses, roads and more. More than 900 people are reported to have been killed and over 300 remain missing in this, Brazil’s worst-ever natural disaster.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-42.JPG
  • A landslide victim lies under debris in Teresopolis, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Thursday Jan. 13, 2011.  At least 350 people have died after landslides hit early Wednesday, and 50 or more were still missing, according to officials.  <br />
<br />
A series of flash floods and mudslides struck several cities in Rio de Janeiro State, destroying houses, roads and more. More than 900 people are reported to have been killed and over 300 remain missing in this, Brazil’s worst-ever natural disaster.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-41.JPG
  • In this Aug.  8, 2012 photo, armed drug traffickers pose for a photo with their backs to the camera in the Antares slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-15.JPG
  • In this photo taken Saturday, Dec. 8, 2012, a man smokes crack at a slum in western Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.  <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    13-HM-Felipe-Dana-11.JPG
  • In this photo taken Saturday, Dec. 8, 2012, a man smokes crack at a slum in western Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.  <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-16.JPG
  • A boy sleeps in a van as he is taken to a shelter during an operation to remove suspects crack users from the streets in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-07.JPG
  • General view of the Rocinha slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Saturday Nov. 12, 2011. <br />
<br />
Elite police units backed by armored military vehicles and helicopters invaded Rocinha, the largest slum in this seaside Olympic city early Sunday. It's the most ambitious attempt yet to bring security to a town long known for its violence. The action is part of a policing program aiming to drive violent and heavily armed drug gangs out of Rio's slums, where the traffickers have ruled for decades.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-03.JPG
  • Marijuana packages are seen at a drug selling point where crack is no longer for sale in the Mandela slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Aug.  7, 2012. <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    13-HM-Felipe-Dana-06.JPG
  • A boy sleeps in a van as he is taken to a shelter during an operation to remove suspects crack users from the streets in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    13-HM-Felipe-Dana-03.JPG
  • Brazilian Army soldiers patrolling the areas of Copacabana beach during the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, or Rio+20 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday June 15, 2012.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-04.JPG
  • Workers remove the body of a man who died by gun shots at Itinga neighborhood in Salvador, Brazil, Wednesday Feb.  8, 2012. <br />
<br />
About one-third of Bahia's 30,000 police went on strike a week ago and murders in the capital's metropolitan area immediately spiked, reaching double normal rates before 2,000 troops were sent in Sunday to patrol the city in armored personnel carriers. The striking police officers are demanding pay raises and amnesty for what a judge ruled an illegal work stoppage.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-02.JPG
  • Relatives and friends mourns over the body of Luiza Paula da Silveira Machado, 14 years-old, during her funeral at Jardim da Saudade cemetery in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday April 8, 2011. <br />
<br />
Luiza was one of the 12 children kiiled by a gunman who opened fire in an elementary school in Rio de Janeiro.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-01.JPG
  • In this Aug.  8, 2012 photo, armed drug traffickers pose for a photo with their backs to the camera in the Antares slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    13-HM-Felipe-Dana-10.JPG
  • Marijuana packages are seen at a drug selling point where crack is no longer for sale in the Mandela slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Aug.  7, 2012. <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-11.JPG
  • In this Aug.  8, 2012 photo, crack users gather under a bridge in the Antares slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    13-HM-Felipe-Dana-09.JPG
  • In this Aug. 11, 2012 photo, a masked and armed trafficker poses for a photo at a drug selling point that no longer sells crack in the Mandela slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-13.JPG
  • In this Aug.  8, 2012 photo, traffickers sell drugs in the Antares slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-10.JPG
  • In this Aug.  8, 2012 photo, traffickers sell drugs in the Antares slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    13-HM-Felipe-Dana-05.JPG
  • In this Aug. 7, 2012 photo, Natalia Gonzales, a 15-year-old crack user, poses for a portrait in an area known as "Crackland" in the Manguinhos slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-12.JPG
  • In this Aug. 11, 2012 photo, a trafficker test fires a riffle in the Mandela slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-09.JPG
  • In this Aug. 12, 2012 photo, a crack user leaves a crack house near the Manguinhos slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    13-HM-Felipe-Dana-12.JPG
  • In this Aug. 7, 2012 photo, Natalia Gonzales, a 15-year-old crack user, poses for a portrait in an area known as "Crackland" in the Manguinhos slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    13-HM-Felipe-Dana-07.JPG
  • In this Aug. 7, 2012 photo, a man smokes crack in the Manguinhos slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    13-HM-Felipe-Dana-02.JPG
  • In this Aug.  8, 2012 photo, crack users gather under a bridge in the Antares slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-14.JPG
  • In this  Aug.  7, 2012 photo, a boy smokes crack in a shack in the Manguinhos slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-08.JPG
  • In this  Aug.  7, 2012 photo, a boy smokes crack in a shack in the Manguinhos slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    13-HM-Felipe-Dana-04.JPG
  • In this Aug. 11, 2012 photo, a trafficker test fires a riffle in the Mandela slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    13-HM-Felipe-Dana-01.JPG
  • In this Aug. 12, 2012 photo, a crack user leaves a crack house near the Manguinhos slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-17.JPG
  • In this Aug. 7, 2012 photo, a man smokes crack in the Manguinhos slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    16-3-Felipe-Dana-06.JPG
  • In this Aug. 11, 2012 photo, a masked and armed trafficker poses for a photo at a drug selling point that no longer sells crack in the Mandela slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. <br />
<br />
 The South American country began experiencing a public health emergency in recent years as demand for crack boomed and open-air "cracolandias," or crack lands, popped up in the sprawling urban centers of Rio and Sao Paulo, with hundreds of users gathering to smoke the drug. The federal government announced in early 2012 that more than $2 billion would be spent to fight the epidemic, with the money spent to train local health care workers, purchase thousands of hospital and shelter beds for emergency treatment, and create transitional centers for recovering users.
    13-HM-Felipe-Dana-08.JPG
  • A resident collects some water as a special forces officer patrols nearby during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-30.JPG
  • A resident walks by a police member of special forces (L) during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-29.JPG
  • Policemen move forward during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-23.JPG
  • Police members of BOPE special forces rides on a bulldozer by residents during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-27.JPG
  • A man is arrested at a pre dawn incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, early on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-26.JPG
  • A helicopter overflies as the sun rises during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, early on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-25.JPG
  • A resident reads a newspaper a female police member of special forces patrols nearby during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-24.JPG
  • A resident crosses a street between armored carriers of Brazilian Navy during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-21.JPG
  • Residents are seen at a bar at the beginning of an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, early on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-22.JPG
  • Residents watch as a police helicopter overflies nearby during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-20.JPG
  • A policeman, member of BOPE special forces, move forward following an armored carrier of Brazilian Navy during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-28.JPG
  • For 17 years, teams from different states meet in the Chapada dos Veadeiros, GO, Brazil, to play under a waterfall. Even with no tradition of water polo, Brazil can boast of having the only championship made in heaven.
    LAT01-09-KfouD-A-04.JPG
  • For 17 years, teams from different states meet in the Chapada dos Veadeiros, GO, Brazil, to play under a waterfall. Even with no tradition of water polo, Brazil can boast of having the only championship made in heaven.
    LAT01-09-KfouD-A-05.JPG
  • For 17 years, teams from different states meet in the Chapada dos Veadeiros, GO, Brazil, to play under a waterfall. Even with no tradition of water polo, Brazil can boast of having the only championship made in heaven.
    LAT01-09-KfouD-A-03.JPG
  • For 17 years, teams from different states meet in the Chapada dos Veadeiros, GO, Brazil, to play under a waterfall. Even with no tradition of water polo, Brazil can boast of having the only championship made in heaven.
    LAT01-09-KfouD-A-02.JPG
  • For 17 years, teams from different states meet in the Chapada dos Veadeiros, GO, Brazil, to play under a waterfall. Even with no tradition of water polo, Brazil can boast of having the only championship made in heaven.
    LAT01-09-KfouD-A-08.JPG
  • For 17 years, teams from different states meet in the Chapada dos Veadeiros, GO, Brazil, to play under a waterfall. Even with no tradition of water polo, Brazil can boast of having the only championship made in heaven.
    LAT01-09-KfouD-A-07.JPG
  • For 17 years, teams from different states meet in the Chapada dos Veadeiros, GO, Brazil, to play under a waterfall. Even with no tradition of water polo, Brazil can boast of having the only championship made in heaven.
    LAT01-09-KfouD-A-06.JPG
  • Field of dreams<br />
<br />
For 17 years, teams from different states meet in the Chapada dos Veadeiros, GO, Brazil, to play under a waterfall. Even with no tradition of water polo, Brazil can boast of having the only championship made in heaven.
    LAT01-09-KfouD-A-01.JPG
  • BRAZIL Rio de Janeiro (RJ) 10/12/2010 - At Itacoatiara beach, in Niteroi, state of Rio de Janeiro the surfers have created a new kind of sport, called "surfing in stone".  The radical sport is to run in a giant stone and practice jumps, maneuvers, and tricks.
    LAT01-09-PellG-A-02.JPG
  • BRAZIL Rio de Janeiro (RJ) 10/12/2010 - At Itacoatiara beach, in Niteroi, state of Rio de Janeiro the surfers have created a new kind of sport, called "surfing in stone".  The radical sport is to run in a giant stone and practice jumps, maneuvers, and tricks.
    LAT01-09-PellG-A-01.JPG
  • BRAZIL Rio de Janeiro (RJ) 10/12/2010 - At Itacoatiara beach, in Niteroi, state of Rio de Janeiro the surfers have created a new kind of sport, called "surfing in stone".  The radical sport is to run in a giant stone and practice jumps, maneuvers, and tricks.
    LAT01-09-PellG-A-06.JPG
  • BRAZIL Rio de Janeiro (RJ) 10/12/2010 - At Itacoatiara beach, in Niteroi, state of Rio de Janeiro the surfers have created a new kind of sport, called "surfing in stone".  The radical sport is to run in a giant stone and practice jumps, maneuvers, and tricks.
    LAT01-09-PellG-A-04.JPG
  • BRAZIL Rio de Janeiro (RJ) 10/12/2010 - At Itacoatiara beach, in Niteroi, state of Rio de Janeiro the surfers have created a new kind of sport, called "surfing in stone".  The radical sport is to run in a giant stone and practice jumps, maneuvers, and tricks.
    LAT01-09-PellG-A-05.JPG
  • BRAZIL Rio de Janeiro (RJ) 10/12/2010 - At Itacoatiara beach, in Niteroi, state of Rio de Janeiro the surfers have created a new kind of sport, called "surfing in stone".  The radical sport is to run in a giant stone and practice jumps, maneuvers, and tricks.
    LAT01-09-PellG-A-03.JPG
  • Colombia, Leticia, 2010. Puerto de Leticia. <br />
Leticia, ciudad capital del departamento del Amazonas. En su puerto se ubica la triple frontera entre Colombia, Perú y Brasil, y es allí donde termina al Sur el mapa colombiano. En este punto del río, se da uno de los más ricos intercambios culturales latinoamericanos y se comercializan los productos para la diaria subsistencia. Aquí fue donde, por primera vez, un europeo tuvo contacto con la etnia Tikuna. Francisco de Orellana también fue el primer conquistador en navegar el Río Amazonas desde los Andes hasta su desembocadura hace más de quinientos años.<br />
Port of Leticia. <br />
Leticia, the capital city of the Amazon.  Its port is located on the triple borders of Colombia , Peru and Brazil, and is there where the Southern Colombian border ends.  At this point of the river, is one of the richest Latin American cultural exchanges and a place where daily necessities are traded.  It was here where the first European had contact with the Tikuna tribe. Francisco de Orellana who was also the first conquistador to navigate from the Andes to the mouth of the Amazon River more than five hundred years ago.
    LAT01-17-EstrDav-05.JPG
  • BRAZIL, SANTAREM REGION. NOVEMBER 2008. Deforestation, aerial view of the Amazon rainforest during fire caused to clear the land.
    LAT01-11-JonoG-12.JPG
  • BRAZIL, SANTAREM. NOVEMBER 2008. Two young men arrested by the police after robbing a person.
    LAT01-11-JonoG-10.JPG
  • BRAZIL, SANTAREM. NOVEMBER 2008. A dead man lies on the floor. His body was found in the River. <br />
The arrival of soya agribusiness in Santarem has had drastic impacts on the local community.<br />
Violence rises in the slums in the outsides of Santarem.
    LAT01-11-JonoG-08.JPG
  • BRAZIL, SANTAREM. NOVEMBER 2008. Two children, one of them disabled (right), crying in their home after being abandoned by their mother who escaped after stabbing her partner. Most of the soya displaced families have to live in slums.
    LAT01-11-JonoG-04.JPG
  • BRAZIL, SANTAREM REGION, AMAZON. NOVEMBER 2008. A man next to a "water wheel", system used to provide water to the houses in the Amazon jungle.
    LAT01-11-JonoG-06.JPG
  • BRAZIL, SANTAREM. OCTOBER 2008. A woman reflexs in a mirror.<br />
She and her family had to leave their land because of the health problems caused by the agrochemicals used to soybean production next to their house.
    LAT01-11-JonoG-03.JPG
  • BRAZIL, SANTAREM. AMAZON, OCTOBER 2008. A nut tree in an area that was deforested and used to grow soya.
    LAT01-11-JonoG-02.JPG
  • BRAZIL, SANTAREM. OCTOBER 2008. A family that has migrated due to soya expansion into the Amazon rainforest.
    LAT01-11-JonoG-11.JPG
  • BRAZIL, SANTAREM. AMAZON, OCTOBER 2008. View of a deforested area that was used to grow soya.
    LAT01-11-JonoG-07.JPG
  • BRAZIL, SANTAREM. NOVEMBER 2008. Two children fishing in the Tapajos River while a soya cargo ship arrives to the Cargill Corporation’s port. Cargill's port construction in the city of Santarem has had detrimental effects on the region by encouraging the growth of the soya industry deep into the Amazon.
    LAT01-11-JonoG-05.JPG
  • Realizado em uma comunidade quilombola no sertao do estado da Bahia, EFEMERIDES DA GENESE e uma elegia a comunidade afro-brasileira. Representam a grande maioria da forca de trabalho do pais, entretanto sofrem com a ma vontade dos poderes publicos e ainda com o preconceito dos seus compatriotas. A narrativa aqui recorre ao realismo fantastico vazar um bocado da sede e do suor de um povo que resiste bravamente as intemperies do tempo e de sua propria gente.  (Foto: Pedro Silveira)
    17-HM-Pedro-Silveira-12.JPG
  • Realizado em uma comunidade quilombola no sertao do estado da Bahia, EFEMERIDES DA GENESE e uma elegia a comunidade afro-brasileira. Representam a grande maioria da forca de trabalho do pais, entretanto sofrem com a ma vontade dos poderes publicos e ainda com o preconceito dos seus compatriotas. A narrativa aqui recorre ao realismo fantastico vazar um bocado da sede e do suor de um povo que resiste bravamente as intemperies do tempo e de sua propria gente.  (Foto: Pedro Silveira)
    17-HM-Pedro-Silveira-08.JPG
  • Realizado em uma comunidade quilombola no sertao do estado da Bahia, EFEMERIDES DA GENESE e uma elegia a comunidade afro-brasileira. Representam a grande maioria da forca de trabalho do pais, entretanto sofrem com a ma vontade dos poderes publicos e ainda com o preconceito dos seus compatriotas. A narrativa aqui recorre ao realismo fantastico vazar um bocado da sede e do suor de um povo que resiste bravamente as intemperies do tempo e de sua propria gente.  (Foto: Pedro Silveira)
    17-HM-Pedro-Silveira-05.JPG
  • Aspiring boxer Joilson Santos (nicknamed "Talent") uses a truck tire for muscle conditioning during a training session at a gymnasium under the Alcantara Machado viaduct in the Mooca neighborhood of Sao Paulo, March 16, 2011. The Boxing Academy of Garrido, founded by Brazilian former pro boxer Nilson Garrido, adopts primitive training equipment that he developed himself during his years as a coach, in a project whose goal is to take the sport to the poor and marginalized population.
    10-1-Nacho-Doce-04.JPG
  • Realizado em uma comunidade quilombola no sertao do estado da Bahia, EFEMERIDES DA GENESE e uma elegia a comunidade afro-brasileira. Representam a grande maioria da forca de trabalho do pais, entretanto sofrem com a ma vontade dos poderes publicos e ainda com o preconceito dos seus compatriotas. A narrativa aqui recorre ao realismo fantastico vazar um bocado da sede e do suor de um povo que resiste bravamente as intemperies do tempo e de sua propria gente.  (Foto: Pedro Silveira)
    17-HM-Pedro-Silveira-09.JPG
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