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Ami Vitale

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  • A make-shift hospital in the interior of Angola serves as the only medicine for a society whose brutal 26 year-civil has displaced around two million people. Angola's brutal 26 year-civil has displaced around two million people - about a sixth of the population - and 200 die each day according to United Nations estimates. .(Photo by Ami Vitale)
    Angola0016.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Afghan street children practice in their costumes and masks for a Japanese sponsored cultural event August 29, 2002 in Kabul, Afghanistan.  The Japanese program concluded with 1000 musical instruments donated to the children.  (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab114D.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Afghan street children watch a Japanese dancer perform a piece called "Reconstruction" at the ASIANA school August 29, 2002 in Kabul Afghanistan.  The Japanese program concluded with 1000 musical instruments donated to the children.  (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab113C.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Afghan women wait with their children to be seen by a doctor in the Indira Ghandi Hospital for Children August 29, 2002 in Kabul Afghanistan. The hospital has 300 beds but usually it is filled at double capacity with only 118 doctors. One in four children die before the age of 5 in Afghanistan. (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab110E.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Afghan women sit by their children Tofan, 1, left, and Zeeya-u-din, 1, who suffer from severe malnutrition in the Indira Ghandi Hospital for Children August 29, 2002 in Kabul Afghanistan. The hospital has 300 beds but usually it is filled at double capacity with only 118 doctors. One in four children die before the age of 5 in Afghanistan. (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab104bA.jpg
  • A survivor of the tsunamis that ravaged the coast of India and Asia sits where her house once stood with all that she could salvage from the wreckage January 5, 2005 in Nagapattinum in the state of Tamil Nadu. The official death toll in India  has reached about 15,000 people and the total dead is over 150,000 in the 11 nations that were hit. (Ami Vitale)
    0014A.JPG
  • Shafika Abbasi, 20, right, who was living in Burke, Va. for the last four years and a relative, Belquis Azizyar, left, visits her cousin Nafisa Arifi after she gave birth to a baby girl  at the Rabia Balkhi hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan August 4, 2002. Infant mortality in Afghanistan in 2000 was 165 per 1,000. live births - one of the highest figures in the world, according to the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF). More than one if four children die before age 5. The U.S. infant mortality rate is 7 per 1,000. Half Afghanistan's children suffer from malnutrition. (Photo  by Ami Vitale)
    usa2.jpg
  • I nurse checks the IV drugs being administered to Afghan patients at the Rabia Balkhi hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan August 4, 2002. Infant mortality in Afghanistan in 2000 was 165 per 1,000. live births - one of the highest figures in the world, according to the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF). More than one if four children die before age 5. The U.S. infant mortality rate is 7 per 1,000. Half Afghanistan's children suffer from malnutrition. (Photo  by Ami Vitale)
    usa11.jpg
  • Afghan girls wait to be visited by a doctor  at the Rabia Balkhi hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan August 4, 2002. Afghanistan has a shortage of female doctors whihc makes women and children even more vulnerable. (Photo  by Ami Vitale)
    usa107.jpg
  • Shafika Abbasi, 20, left, who was living in Burke, Va. for the last four years and a relative, Belquis Azizyar, right, visits her cousin Nafisa Arifi after she gave birth to a baby girl  at the Rabia Balkhi hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan August 4, 2002. Infant mortality in Afghanistan in 2000 was 165 per 1,000. live births - one of the highest figures in the world, according to the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF). More than one if four children die before age 5. The U.S. infant mortality rate is 7 per 1,000. Half Afghanistan's children suffer from malnutrition. (Photo  by Ami Vitale)
    usa103.jpg
  • I nurse checks the IV drugs being administered to Afghan patients at the Rabia Balkhi hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan August 4, 2002. Infant mortality in Afghanistan in 2000 was 165 per 1,000. live births - one of the highest figures in the world, according to the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF). More than one if four children die before age 5. The U.S. infant mortality rate is 7 per 1,000. Half Afghanistan's children suffer from malnutrition. (Photo  by Ami Vitale)
    usa102.jpg
  • A make-shift hospital in the interior of Angola serves as the only medical facility for a society whose brutal 26 year-civil has displaced around two million people. Angola's brutal 26 year-civil war has displaced around two million people - about a sixth of the population - and 200 die each day according to United Nations estimates. .(Photo by Ami Vitale)
    Africa_Angola_04.tiff
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Afghan street children watch a Japanese dancer perform a piece called "Reconstruction" at the ASIANA school August 29, 2002 in Kabul Afghanistan.  The Japanese program concluded with 1000 musical instruments donated to the children.  (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab115B.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Afghan street children watch a Japanese dancer perform a piece called "Reconstruction" at the ASIANA school August 29, 2002 in Kabul Afghanistan.  The Japanese program concluded with 1000 musical instruments donated to the children.  (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab112D.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Afghan street children scream as a boy in their school dressed up in a mask tries to scare them at the ASIANA school August 29, 2002 in Kabul Afghanistan.  The children were there for a Japanese music and dance program which concluded with 1000 musical instruments donated to the children.  (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab111E.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: An Afghan child attends a Japanese music and dance performance  at the ASIANA school August 29, 2002 in Kabul, Afghanistan.  The Japanese program concluded with 1000 musical instruments donated to the children.  (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab109D.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Afghan street children watch a Japanese dancer perform a piece called "Reconstruction" at the ASIANA school August 29, 2002 in Kabul Afghanistan.  The Japanese program concluded with 1000 musical instruments donated to the children.  (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab107F.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Zeeya-u-din, 1, who suffers from severe malnutrition cries in the Indira Ghandi Hospital for Children August 29, 2002 in Kabul Afghanistan. The hospital has 300 beds but usually it is filled at double capacity with only 118 doctors. One in four children die before the age of 5 in Afghanistan. (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab106H.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Amir Rahman, 2, and Farshad, 6 months, sleep in the Indira Ghandi Hospital for Children August 29, 2002 in Kabul Afghanistan. The hospital has 300 beds but usually it is filled at double capacity with only 118 doctors. One in four children die before the age of 5 in Afghanistan. (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab105G.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Afghan women sit by their children Tofan, 1, left, and Zeeya-u-din, 1, who suffer from severe malnutrition in the Indira Ghandi Hospital for Children August 29, 2002 in Kabul Afghanistan. The hospital has 300 beds but usually it is filled at double capacity with only 118 doctors. One in four children die before the age of 5 in Afghanistan. (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab104F.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Afghan women wait with their children to be seen by a doctor in the Indira Ghandi Hospital for Children August 29, 2002 in Kabul Afghanistan. The hospital has 300 beds but usually it is filled at double capacity with only 118 doctors. One in four children die before the age of 5 in Afghanistan. (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab103G.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Dr. Abdul Qader Ghafari stitches the hand of  Rashid, 6, in the Indira Ghandi Hospital for Children August 29, 2002 in Kabul, Afghanistan. The hospital has 300 beds but usually it is filled at double capacity with only 118 doctors. (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab102H.jpg
  • KABUL,AFGHANISTAN - AUGUST 29: Afghan women wait with their children to be seen by a doctor in the Indira Ghandi Hospital for Children August 29, 2002 in Kabul Afghanistan. The hospital has 300 beds but usually it is filled at double capacity with only 118 doctors. (Photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    kab101H.jpg
  • GERIHUN, SIERRA LEONE - JULY 18:Liberian refugees walk through their plastic tents  at the Gerihun camp near Bo, Sierra Leone July 18,2002. Sierra Leone is infamous for some of the decade's worst war crimes and the irony is that as Sierra Leonians are finally able to return home, their neighbors across the border are suffering from their own tragic decade old conflict and flooding into the camps which once housed the internally displaced Sierra Leonians. Liberia's rebels have waged an insurgency for three years, but have stepped up attacks recently against President Charles Taylor's government. Taylor, a former warlord who won presidential elections in 1997, says he is being targeted by some of his rivals from the 1989-96 civil war.  The heavy toll on civilians in the fighting poses a threat to the stability of other countries in the region, particularly Sierra Leone. There are about 50,000 refugees in Sierra Leone now according to the World Food Program and 100,000 internally displaced people within Liberia now. Sierra Leone, which has the U.N's largest peacekeeping mission with 17,3000 troops, is recovering from a ruthless 10-year-old war and held presidential elections in May. (photo by Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    ger115.jpg
  • Praviti cries outside the remains of her home after she lost 2 relatives in the deadly tsunamis that ravaged the coast of India and Asia January 5, 2005 in Cuddalore in the state of Tamil Nadu. 15,000 people died in India alone and hundreds of thousand were made homeless. (Ami Vitale)
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  • Traditional doctor heats a gold needle to treat joint pains or headaches to a patient at the Trashi Yengtse hospital in Eastern  Bhutan October 15, 2005. (ami Vitale)
    Bhutan092.jpg
  • Afghan women and their children wait to be seen by a doctor  from the non-governmental aid agency Medicine San Frontiers near the village of Anbar Somuch in the Bamiyan district of Afghanistan July 31, 2002.  USA. Infant mortality in Afghanistan in 2000 was 165 per 1,000. live births - one of the highest figures in the world, according to the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF). More than one if four children die before age 5. The U.S. infant mortality rate is 7 per 1,000. Half Afghanistan's children suffer from malnutrition. (Photo  by Ami Vitale)
    usa5.jpg
  • An Afghan woman and her child wait to be seen by a doctor  from the non-governmental aid agency Medicine San Frontiers near the village of Anbar Somuch in the Bamiyan district of Afghanistan July 31, 2002.  USA. Infant mortality in Afghanistan in 2000 was 165 per 1,000. live births - one of the highest figures in the world, according to the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF). More than one if four children die before age 5. The U.S. infant mortality rate is 7 per 1,000. Half Afghanistan's children suffer from malnutrition. (Photo  by Ami Vitale)
    usa102-2.jpg
  • ANBAR SOMUCH, AFGHANISTAN, AUGUST 1, 2002:   Afghan women and their children wait to be seen by a doctor  from the non-governmental aid agency Medicine San Frontiers near the village of Anbar Somuch in the Bamiyan district of Afghanistan July 31, 2002.  USA. Infant mortality in Afghanistan in 2000 was 165 per 1,000. live births - one of the highest figures in the world, according to the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF). More than one if four children die before age 5. The U.S. infant mortality rate is 7 per 1,000. Half Afghanistan's children suffer from malnutrition. (Photo  by Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0072b.jpg
  • ANBAR SOMUCH, AFGHANISTAN, AUGUST 1, 2002:   Afghan women and their children wait to be seen by a doctor  from the non-governmental aid agency Medicine San Frontiers near the village of Anbar Somuch in the Bamiyan district of Afghanistan July 31, 2002.  USA. Infant mortality in Afghanistan in 2000 was 165 per 1,000. live births - one of the highest figures in the world, according to the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF). More than one if four children die before age 5. The U.S. infant mortality rate is 7 per 1,000. Half Afghanistan's children suffer from malnutrition. (Photo  by Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0089-2.jpg
  • ANBAR SOMUCH, AFGHANISTAN, AUGUST 1, 2002:   Afghan women and their children wait to be seen by a doctor  from the non-governmental aid agency Medicine San Frontiers near the village of Anbar Somuch in the Bamiyan district of Afghanistan July 31, 2002.  USA. Infant mortality in Afghanistan in 2000 was 165 per 1,000. live births - one of the highest figures in the world, according to the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF). More than one if four children die before age 5. The U.S. infant mortality rate is 7 per 1,000. Half Afghanistan's children suffer from malnutrition. (Photo  by Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0088-3.jpg
  • ANBAR SOMUCH, AFGHANISTAN, AUGUST 1, 2002:   Afghan women and their children wait to be seen by a doctor  from the non-governmental aid agency Medicine San Frontiers near the village of Anbar Somuch in the Bamiyan district of Afghanistan July 31, 2002.  USA. Infant mortality in Afghanistan in 2000 was 165 per 1,000. live births - one of the highest figures in the world, according to the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF). More than one if four children die before age 5. The U.S. infant mortality rate is 7 per 1,000. Half Afghanistan's children suffer from malnutrition. (Photo  by Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0084.jpg
  • A make-shift hospital in the interior of Angola serves as the only medicine for a society whose brutal 26 year-civil war has displaced around two million peopl and 200 die each day according to United Nations estimates. .(Photo by Ami Vitale)
    Africa_Angola_018.tiff
  • RUKUM DISTRICT, NEPAL, APRIL 19, 2004:  A Nepali woman holds her grandchild in Bafikot, Rukum District April 19, 2004. Maoists have create blockades throughout the Western part of the country causing food and medicine shortages fro ordinary people.  Analysts and diplomats estimate there about 15,000-20,000 hard-core Maoist fighters, including many women, backed by 50,000 "militia".  In their remote strongholds, they collect taxes and have set up civil administrations, and people's courts. They also raise money by taxing villagers and foreign trekkers.  They are tough in Nepal's rugged terrain, full of thick forests and deep ravines and the 150,000 government soldiers are not enough to combat this growing movement that models itself after the Shining Path of Peru. (Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    ami156.jpg
  • A make-shift hospital in the interior of Angola serves as the only medicine for a society whose brutal 26 year-civil has displaced around two million peopl and 200 die each day according to United Nations estimates. .(Photo by Ami Vitale)
    Angola0020.jpg
  • Displaced Angolans walk at least twenty miles to the city of Kuito with sacks of charcoal on their heads in order to sell it so they have money to buy food and medicines. Angola's brutal 26 year-civil war has displaced around two million people - about a sixth of the population - and 200 die each day according to United Nations estimates. .(Photo by Ami Vitale)
    Africa_Angola_03.tiff
  • Evaristo Tinka, 19, from Katabola, Angola is fed intravaneously with glucose at a Medicines San Frontiers (MSF) emergency hospital, Friday March 3, 2000. Angola's brutal 26 year-civil war has displaced around two million people - about a sixth of the population - and 200 die each day according to United Nations estimates. .(Photo by Ami Vitale)
    Africa_Angola_02.tiff
  • Evaristo Tinka, 19, from Katabola, Angola is fed intravaneously with glucose at a (MSF) Medicines San Frontiers emergency hospital, Friday March 3, 2000. Angola's brutal 26 year-civil has displaced around two million people - about a sixth of the population - and 200 die each day according to United Nations estimates. .(Photo by Ami Vitale)
    Angola0012.jpg
  • Displaced Angolans walk at least twenty miles to the city of Kuito with sacks of charcoal on their heads in order to sell it so they have money to buy food and medicines. Angola's brutal 26 year-civil has displaced around two million people - about a sixth of the population - and 200 die each day according to United Nations estimates. .(Photo by Ami Vitale)
    Angola0010.jpg