Chalin Sejour, 28, sits in front of her destroyed house with her belongs covered in mud in Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Sept. 17,2008. Long after the floodwaters from three hurricanes and a tropical storm have receded from Haiti's mud-caked streets, new bodies are still showing up every day, officials said Wednesday.
A refugee eats a corn at a shelter in Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2008. Long after the floodwaters from three hurricanes and a tropical storm have receded from Haiti's mud-caked streets, new bodies are still showing up every day, officials said Wednesday. 800,000 Haitians are in need of aid.
A woman bathes herself in a street of a neighborhood that was destroyed by floods in Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Sept. 17,2008. Long after the floodwaters from three hurricanes and a tropical storm have receded from Haiti's mud-caked streets, new bodies are still showing up every day, officials said Wednesday. 800,000 Haitians are in need of aid.
A woman walks through a neighborhood destroyed by floods in Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2008. Long after the floodwaters from three hurricanes and a tropical storm have receded from Haiti's mud-caked streets, new bodies are still showing up every day, officials said Wednesday. 800,000 Haitians are in need of aid.
Doctor Pierre Malchair, of Doctors without borders, examines a girl in a shelter in Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2008. Long after the floodwaters from three hurricanes and a tropical storm have receded from Haiti's mud-caked streets, new bodies are still showing up every day, officials said Wednesday.
A man shovels mud in Gonaives, Haiti, Thursday, Sept. 18, 2008. The floodwaters from three hurricanes and a tropical storms are receding and leaving Haiti with mud-caked streets. (
A woman walks through a muddy street in Gonaives, Haiti, Thursday, Sept. 18, 2008. The floodwaters from three hurricanes and a tropical storms are receding and leaving Haiti with mud-caked streets.
People load a U.S. Navy ship with disaster relief for flood victims in Port-au-Prince, Thursday, Sept. 18, 2008. The U.N.'s World Health Organization is appealing for US$4.2 million to help treat injured and sick Haitians in the wake of a devastating string of storms.
A woman waits with two children for a medical examination in a shelter in Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Sept. 17,2008. Long after the floodwaters from three hurricanes and a tropical storm have receded from Haiti's mud-caked streets, new bodies are still showing up every day, officials said Wednesday.
Refugees line up at a shelter prior to a medical examinationin Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2008. Long after the floodwaters from three hurricanes and a tropical storm have receded from Haiti's mud-caked streets, new bodies are still showing up every day, officials said Wednesday.
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