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A Haitian injured child is treated at a makeshift medical centre in Chatuley, Haiti, on Jan. 20, 2010 after the country was shattered by a massive 7.0-magnitude quake.

A mother feeds her child at a makeshift hospital in Port-au-Prince on Jan. 21, 2010 following the massive 7.0-magnitude quake that shattered the country.

A child sits in a makeshift refugee camp in Port-au-Prince January 22, 2010. With food, cash and medicine starting to flow, Haiti's government and aid workers are turning to the mammoth task of feeding and sheltering hundreds of thousands of earthquake survivors still living in the capital's rubble-strewn streets and filthy tent cities. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

Vancouver paramedic Chris Kaley cleans the wounds of a child at a field hospital in Leogane near Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Thursday. Bricks had fallen on the child's head. The hospital is staffed by Canadian Forces members and civilians from across Canada.

An orphaned child sleeps on the ground at the Maison des Enfants De Dieu orphanage on January 20, 2010 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

A child holds onto a fence inside a makeshift refugee camp at a soccer stadium in Port-au-Prince January 21, 2010. Banks in earthquake-hit Haiti will start operating again from the weekend, the country's commerce minister said on Thursday, as the government worked with aid partners to start trying to get the shattered economy back on its feet.

A child waits to be medivaced by U.S. Army soldiers from the 82nd Airborne to the USNS Comfort on January 21, 2010 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Planeloads of rescuers and relief supplies headed to Haiti as governments and aid agencies launched a massive relief operation after a powerful earthquake that may have killed thousands. Many buildings were reduced to rubble by the 7.0-strong quake on January 12. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

A man sits with his child at a makeshift refugee camp in Port-au-Prince. The seaport in Haiti's capital, damaged in the country's devastating earthquake, has reopened for limited aid shipments, the U.S. Coast Guard said on Thursday.

A child stands in his tent in a makeshift refugee camp in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Jan. 20, 2010.

PORT AU PRINCE, HAITI; JANUARY 18, 2010 -- Search and Rescue Technicians Sergeant Master Corporal Kevin O'Donnell (Centre) and Sergeant Dave Payne look after a baby as another child looks on at a makeshift clinic set up on the grounds of the Hopital de la Paix in Port au Prince, Haiti, Monday January 18, 2009, six days after a magnitude 7 earthquake that hit the country. Rescue workers say that they are still finding people alive in collapsed buildings.

Handout photo released on January 19, 2010 by Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) shows a child hospitalized in a less passing corner outside a hospital in Carrefour, Haiti. The United Nations said on January 20, 2010 that 121 people had been rescued by international teams from the debris of collapsed buildings in Haiti since the January 12 earthquake. JULIE REMY/AFP/Getty Images

In this image released by the US Navy, Chief Hospital Corpsman Rioni, a member of a maritime civil affairs team embarked aboard the the amphibious dock landing ship USS Carter Hall, gives water to a dehydrated child on January 19, 2010 after the devastating earthquake left the village of Bonel with a severe shortage of food and water. Carter Hall is on station near Port-au-Prince, Haiti supporting Operation Unified Response, a joint operation providing military support capabilities to civil authorities to help stabilize and improve the situation in Haiti following a 7.0 magnitude earthquake that devastated the country on January 12.

 
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