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Carl Juste's photos from Haiti


(top photo) Desperate Haitians enter a damaged clothing store to look for food and clothing jarred loose by the aftershock. CARL JUSTE / MIAMI HERALD STAFF (second photo) Roselyn Joseph, left, buries her daughter Emanuela Aminise, 14, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Thursday. CARL JUSTE/MIAMI HERALD STAFF (third photo) A World Food Program food delivery that targeted 25,000 families underscored the difficulties of feeding the hungry in Haiti. The delivery was delayed several hours because of logistics, change-in-plans, and gunshots in the targeted neighborhood. (fourth photo) Mass graves dug by a back hoe and sealed with help of a bulldozer is part of the government's hard answer for disposal of the many unnamed victims of Haiti's worst earthquake in two hundreds years. CARL JUSTE / MIAMI HERALD STAFF

(top photo) Desperate Haitians enter a damaged clothing store to look for food and clothing jarred loose by the aftershock. CARL JUSTE / MIAMI HERALD STAFF

(second photo) Roselyn Joseph, left, buries her daughter Emanuela Aminise, 14, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Thursday. CARL JUSTE/MIAMI HERALD STAFF

(third photo) A World Food Program food delivery that targeted 25,000 families underscored the difficulties of feeding the hungry in Haiti. The delivery was delayed several hours because of logistics, change-in-plans, and gunshots in the targeted neighborhood.

(fourth photo) Mass graves dug by a back hoe and sealed with help of a bulldozer is part of the government's hard answer for disposal of the many unnamed victims of Haiti's worst earthquake in two hundreds years. CARL JUSTE / MIAMI HERALD STAFF