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  • Abril y Mayo 2011/Bolivia<br />
<br />
Julia La Paceña de vestido naranjo en suelo es derrotada por Carmen Rosa y su compañero el enmascarado<br />
<br />
Foto.Juan Gonzalez
    10-HM-Juan-Gonzalez-07.JPG
  • Selena Quintriqueo, 4, suffers from bronchospasm. Her doctor recomended a gas mask after the volcanic eruption to protect against the health risks caused by volcanic ash.
    08-2-Jessica-Pons-07.JPG
  • In this March 11, 2012 photo, the bodies of Lesbia Altamirano and Wilmer Orbera lie on the floor of a pool hall after being attacked by unidentified masked assailants in Choloma on the outskirts of San Pedro Sula, Honduras. A wave of violence has made Honduras among the most dangerous places on Earth, with a homicide rate roughly 20 times that of the U.S. rate, according to a 2011 United Nations report.
    16-HM-Esteban-Felix-13.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 />
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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 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
  • Colombia,  Amazonas, Macedonia, 2010. Paisaje en venta. <br />
El turismo es la mayor fuente de ingresos de los habitantes del Amazonas. Actividades como la pintura, la talla de madera, la elaboración de máscaras y collares, y el comercio han superado las habituales formas de ganarse la vida: la pesca y la agricultura.<br />
. Landscape on sale. <br />
Tourism is the greatest source of income for the inhabitants of the Amazon. Activities like painting, wood carving, and the creation of masks and necklaces.  Trade has overtaken the usual forms of earning a living: fishing and agriculture.
    LAT01-17-EstrDav-04.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
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