Robert Harding

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832-141141 - Poor dwellings, wooden stilt houses, mangrove area in the estuary of the Rio Anchicaya river in the Pacific at high tide, Bajamar slum, Buenaventura, Valle del Cauca, Colombia, South America
832-141142 - Poor dwellings, wooden stilt houses, mangrove area in the estuary of the Rio Anchicaya river in the Pacific at high tide, Bajamar slum, Buenaventura, Valle del Cauca, Colombia, South America
832-141132 - Poor dwellings, stilt houses, mangrove area in the estuary of the Rio Anchicaya river in the Pacific, Bajamar slum, Buenaventura, Valle del Cauca, Colombia, South America
832-121568 - Rubble in the slums of Fort National, the district was largely destroyed by the earthquake in January 2010, in the back the destroyed presidential palace, Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Caribbean, Central America
1113-67728 - demolition in old town, Lao Xi Men, redevelopment area, living amongst demolished houses, migrant worker, living in demolished houses and self built shacks, slum, Living amongst ruins, playing majong
1194-22 - CAMBODIA Women trained by CSARO to make handicrafts from recycled materials. Some are former waste pickers whose lives have been improved by the project. Kim Savoeun, 49, is the mother of 2 of the girls working here. The settlement slum of San Sok, 10 kilometres outsdie Phnom Penh
1194-364 - Colombia single mother with her children, barrancabermeja. Beautiful people, but they are extremely poor, and the children both suffer from malnutrition and stunted growth. She often does not send them to school becasue they are too hungry
1194-92 - CAMBODIA HIV+ couple making handicrafts. Toul Sambo village is a resettlement area outside of Phnom Penh. Set in rural tranquility surrounded by paddy fields, it is a peaceful place for its residents. A Caritas Cambodia project, it has two focus groups who live there. One group is largely HIV+ and used to reside in a Phnom Penh slum called Borey Kila, until they were evicted by the government who wanted to develop the land for offices and shopping malls. The other group consists of those made homeless when a river's bank subsided in their village, destroying their homes. At the home of Kea Nimal and Kem Sokhorn, both HIV+. They are very industrious working at home making paper bags and ornaments, some with recyclable materials. They can earn $12-$15 per 5-day working week, and live quite comfortably in their attractive home with TV, motor-cycle and other conveniences. They say they are much better off than in the crowded and unhealth slum of Borey Kila in Phnom Penh where they used to live. They get regular orders for the handicrafts they make. They stay healthy by taking ARVs, which are supplied free of charge by the Hope Organization. PHOTO by Sean Sprague