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  • 23
    Aug
    2012
    10:08am, EDT

    Manila's hidden spaces: Life on the margins in a crowded megacity

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    John Harris stands next to his family: wife Remedios (who holds Joshua, 3), Jamie, 11, John, 16, and Joyce, 8, at the small space where they live under a bridge in Manila, Philippines on August 21, 2012 . John is a construction worker making 250 pesos ($6) a day. The family live in a small space under a bridge alongside many other impoverished families.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    Irish Romes, 19, holds her 2-week-old baby Jay at the place where she lives with her family next to a highway in the slums of Binondo, Manila on August 21, 2012.

    Manila's population of 20 million people is rising by approximately a quarter of a million every year. Due to overcrowding a third of the Filipino capital's residents are forced to live on any bit of spare land they can manage, often in makeshift settlements under bridges, beside railway lines and even in cemeteries.

    Large families are common in a conservative Catholic county that is pushing the government's already weak social care system to its limit.

    See more of Getty Images photographer Paula Bronstein's work on population issues in the Philippines in Tuesday's post: Mothers give birth in an already overpopulated Manila.

    Look back at PhotoBlog posts on Filipino housing issues and on the world's seven billion population milestone, reached in 2011.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    A boy looks out from his home in a congested slum area of Manila on August 21, 2012.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    A man stands next to the door of his room under a bridge in Manila on August 21, 2012. Families cram into small rooms under a bridge so they can live for free.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    A man washes clothes as children look out from the small room under a bridge within which they live on August 22, 2012 in Manila.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    A woman holds her daughter in their makeshift shack in the Binondo slums of Manila, which they rent for 1,000 pesos ($24) a month.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures on Twitter

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

     

    6 comments

    40% of the population lives on $4 a day or less. I visited there two times in 2010 and found the people very friendly, quite optimistic and hard working.

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    Explore related topics: philippines, asia, housing, poverty, population, world-news, featured, manila
  • 2
    Aug
    2012
    6:59am, EDT

    Jianan Yu / Reuters

    China's property ladder

    A laborer eats dinner in his shelter at the construction site of a residential complex in Hefei, Anhui province, on August 1, 2012.

    The average home price in China's 100 major cities edged up in July for the second straight month, Reuters reports, reinforcing signs of a recovery in the property market even as the government seeks to spur broader economic growth, a private sector survey showed on Wednesday.

    Comment

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  • 24
    Jul
    2012
    4:48pm, EDT

    Remote Area Medical offers free healthcare to impoverished Appalachia

    Mark Makela / Reuters

    People wait to receive a wristband number for medical treatment at the Remote Area Medical (RAM) clinic in Wise, Va. on July 20. RAM clinics bring free medical, dental and vision care to uninsured and under-insured people around the world.

    Mark Makela / Reuters

    RAM founder Stan Brock calls patients wristband numbers at the RAM clinic in Wise, Va. The Wise clinic was the 647th RAM expedition since 1985 and drew 1,700 patients from 14 states, organizers said.

    Mark Makela / Reuters

    A patient has an eye exam at the Wise, Va. RAM clinic on July 20.

    Mark Makela / Reuters

    Dentists work on patients at the RAM clinic in Wise, Va.

    Mark Makela / Reuters

    Joe Roberts, from Sutherland, Va., intending to have ten teeth extracted, waits for his wristband number to be called at the RAM clinic on July 20.

    By Jon Sweeney, NBC News

    Remote Area Medical clinics bring free health, dental and vision care to uninsured and under-insured people across the country and abroad. The Wise, Va. clinic held on July 20, was the 647th RAM expedition since 1985 and drew 1,700 patients from 14 states, organizers said.

    Reuters photographer, Mark Makela wrote in his blog: Witnessing horrific health cases, one after the other, was a heartbreaking experience.

    A 20-year-old had 20 teeth extracted. A mother of two who lost her job due to poor eye sight came for eye care and glasses. A three-year-old had to undergo oral surgery for a root canal and front teeth extraction. These were just a few of the heart-wrenching health cases I observed.

    There was a chronic pattern of poor oral hygiene and due to patients’ extreme dental pain they asked for teeth extraction instead of teeth repair. Continue reading

    Photos in this blog post were taken on July 20, but made available to NBC News today.

     

    Mark Makela / Reuters

    A dentist displays extracted teeth at the Wise, Va. RAM clinic, and drops them in a gallon jug of distilled water.

    Mark Makela / Reuters

    A board lists the variety of medical talks offered at the RAM clinic.

    Mark Makela / Reuters

    A chihuahua named Bella leans on her owner the night before the RAM clinic opens in Wise, Va. on July 19.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    8 comments

    They do it with religion and guns Cappy. It's cynical and heartless. Strange bed-fellows though.

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  • 19
    Jun
    2012
    8:43pm, EDT

    Mobile food pantry serves fresh groceries to families in need

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    Joseph Smith walks down a road with a basket of food that was handed out by the Food Bank of the Southern Tier Mobile Food Pantry on June 19 in Deposit, N.Y.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    Deposit, N.Y. at the Southern Tier of New York borders Pennsylvania and is predominately rural. It has been struggling for decades with both high unemployment and chronic levels of poverty. The area was once a manufacturing base for major American companies.

    Once a manufacturing base for U.S. companies, the Southern Tier of New York covers nearly 4,000 predominately rural miles, and according to the 2010 Census, 15.72% the population live at or below the federal poverty level.

    To help families in need, the mobile food pantry was introduced by the Food Bank of the Southern Tier in 2007. A converted beverage truck delivers fresh produce, dairy products, and other grocery items to more than 100 families in a two-hour distribution period.

    -- Spencer Platt, Getty Images photographer

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    People line-up with boxes and baskets for food at a distribution point by the Food Bank of the Southern Tier Mobile Food Pantry on June 19 in Deposit, N.Y.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    People recieve food at a distribution point that was handed out by the Food Bank of the Southern Tier Mobile Food Pantry.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    People line-up to receive food at a distribution point that was handed out by the Food Bank of the Southern Tier Mobile Food Pantry on June 19.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    Dominick Aldridga, 8, stands with members of his family at a distribution point by the Food Bank of the Southern Tier Mobile Food Pantry.

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  • 19
    Jun
    2012
    8:07am, EDT

    Rights groups protest as Roma families are rehoused in Romanian industrial facility

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    A Roma boy climbs on the top of a ramshackle house, torn down by local authorities, in Craica, a shantytown on the outskirts of Baia Mare, Romania. All pictures taken on June 14, 2012 and made available on June 19.

    Human rights groups have accused authorities in a Romanian town of violating legislation and trampling on the dignity of Roma gypsy inhabitants by forcibly evicting hundreds of them and relocating them to a chemical plant closed down over pollution concerns. 

    Authorities in Baia Mare began moving dozens of families in May from poor neighborhoods where they had lived in 20-year-old improvised buildings with no water, sewage or power supplies.

    Amnesty International expressed concern following local media reports that 22 children and 2 adults had become ill after they were rehoused in the former industrial facility.

    The vast majority of Romanian Roma live on the margins of society in abject poverty and pro-democracy groups say the state does not do enough to prevent discrimination.

    -- Agence France Presse and Reuters contributed to this report

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    Roma children play outside a former Cuprom chemical plant turned into a housing project in Baia Mare.

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    A bulldozer prepares to tear down a ramshackle house in Craica.

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    A Roma child sits on a couch in Craica.

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    Roma people go through waste debris looking for useful materials, after several ramshackle houses were torn down by local authorities in Craica.

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    A Roma man looks on as authorities prepare to tear down houses in Craica.

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    A Roma child sleeps in a ramshackle house in Craica.

     

    7 comments

    First of all, these gypsies built their so-called houses on public domain, without any authorization. More than that, you could find there gypsies from other counties who moved in and established there. On the other hand the authorities re-located the gypsies in an OFFICE BUILDING! There were no che …

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    Explore related topics: human-rights, europe, romania, housing, poverty, world-news, featured, roma, baia-mare
  • 16
    May
    2012
    7:28am, EDT

    Fire tears through Bangladesh slum

    Andrew Biraj / Reuters

    A man salvages his belongings after a fire in a slum at Shyamoli in Dhaka, the Bangladeshi capital, on May 16, 2012.

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    At least 10 people were injured, including a firefighter who sustained burns, and more than 150 shanties were burned down as a blaze swept through a Dhaka slum, Reuters reports. The local fire department said the cause of the blaze had yet to be ascertained.

    Bangladeshi photographer Abir Abdullah, who took the photo below, has been documenting the havoc created by Dhaka's frequent fires for several years. He spoke to The New York Times about the project last month.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Abir Abdullah / EPA

    A woman cries holding her child after she lost her shanty house in the fire.

    Munir Uz Zaman / AFP - Getty Images

    Firefighters work to control the blaze.

     

    2 comments

    Thay have learned America will bend over easy, and after 20 catastrophes in 7 years you would think someone would say lets pack up and move from this place i've got a bad feeling about this location???? And no pressure in fire hose.Duah.

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    Explore related topics: bangladesh, fire, housing, south-asia, poverty, world-news, dhaka
  • 2
    May
    2012
    8:04am, EDT

    Vivek Prakash / Reuters

    Sana, a five-year-old girl, plays on a cloth sling hanging from a signalling pole as smoke from a garbage dump rises next to a railway track in Mumbai, India, on May 2, 2012.

    Garbage dump, and kids' playground

    3 comments

    It's sad to think children anywhere have to play in such filthy conditions.

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    Explore related topics: india, play, south-asia, poverty, mumbai, garbage-dump
  • 25
    Apr
    2012
    8:26am, EDT

    Indian family face up to life on the streets

    Tsering Topgyal / AP

    A homeless family sleeps under an overpass in New Delhi, India, on April 25, 2012. Already the second most populous country on the planet with 1.2 billion people, India is expected to overtake China around 2030 when its population soars to an estimated 1.6 billion even as hundreds of millions of people remain trapped in abject poverty.

    See more PhotoBlog posts relating to population issues and watch a video about the challenges India faces:

     

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    2 comments

    Their backward mentality can be gleaned when if you ask a person "are you a hindu" the usually poorer people will say "Yes i am and i am a Brahmin Hindu" to assert their caste superiority over the others.. It is really sad to see how there are Two Indias far worse than any place in Asia.

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    Explore related topics: india, south-asia, poverty, population, homeless, new-delhi
  • 20
    Apr
    2012
    8:08am, EDT

    Noel Celis / AFP - Getty Images

    Firemen extinguish a fire at an informal settlers' housing area in Manila, Philippines, on April 20, 2012. Around 150 families from an informal settlement area lost their homes. Nobody was reported killed in the incident, according to local authorities.

    Philippines fire destroys homes in impoverished district

    See more images related to Filipino housing issues on PhotoBlog.

    Comment

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  • 16
    Feb
    2012
    9:52am, EST

    India's hunger 'shame': 3,000 children die every day, despite economic growth

    Severely malnourished girl Rajni, 2, is weighed by health workers in Madhya Pradesh, India, February 1.

    By Reuters

    Crying as she is put on an electronic scale, two-year-old Rajini's naked shriveled frame casts a dark shadow over a rising India, where millions of children have little to eat.

    The children are scrawny, listless and sick in this run-down nutrition clinic in central India with its intermittent power supply. If they survive they will grow up shorter, weaker and less smart than their better-fed peers.


    Rajini weighs 5 kg (11 lb), about half of what she should.

    "She's as light as a leaf, this can't be good," says her grandmother, Sushila Devi, poking her rib-protruding stomach in the clinic in Shivpuri district in Madhya Pradesh state.

    Almost as shocking as India's high prevalence of child malnutrition is the country's failure to reduce it, despite the economy tripling between 1990 and 2005 to become Asia's third largest and annual per capita income rising to $489 from $96.

    1 in 4 children malnourished, global report says

    A government-supported survey last month said 42 percent of children under five are underweight - almost double that of sub-Saharan Africa - compared to 43 percent five years ago.

    The statistic - which means 3,000 children dying daily due to illnesses related to poor diets - led Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to admit malnutrition was "a national shame" and was putting the health of the nation in jeopardy.

    "It is a national shame. Child nutrition is a marker of the many things that are not going right for the poor of India," said Purnima Menon, research fellow on poverty, health and nutrition at the Institute of Food Policy Research Institute.

    India's efforts to reduce the number of undernourished kids have been largely hampered by blighting poverty where many cannot afford the amount and types of food they need.

    Adnan Abidi / Reuters

    Women hold their severely malnourished children as they stand outside the Nutritional Rehabilitation Centre of Shivpuri, Madhya Pradesh, India, February 1.

    Poor hygiene, low public health spending and little education and awareness have not helped. Age-old customs discriminating against women such as child marriage have also contributed, but are far harder to tackle, say experts.

    In addition, shoddy management of food stocks, subsidized carbohydrate-rich food that fuel and fill the poor rather than truly nourishing them and real shortages in its poorest states have worsened the problem.

    At the Shivpuri clinic, health worker Rekha Singh Chauhan tends to emaciated young children in a ward with a ganglion of electrical wires running cross its paint-chipped walls.

    "We only have a handful to take care of now, but come April, the cases will shoot up," says Chauhan, adding that diseases such as diarrhea and malaria will cause an influx of sick underweight children with the onset of summer.

    "The situation becomes bad. Three children are made to share a bed and many have to sleep on the floor."

    That picture jars with an India clocking enviable 8-9 percent growth over the last five years that has put money in the pockets of millions of its people and fuelled demand for everything from cars and computers to clothes and fancy homes.

    It has also catapulted the country onto the world stage, boosting its claim for a bigger role on forums such as the U.N. Security Council. This month, it moved closer to buying new fighter jets worth a whopping $15 billion.

    Adnan Abidi / Reuters

    Four-month-old Vishakha, who weighs 2.3 kg (5 lbs) and suffers from severe malnutrition, rests on a bed next to her mother at the Nutritional Rehabilitation Centre, Shivpuri, Madhya Pradesh, India on February 1.

    Yet while the urban middle classes dine in swanky shopping malls where eateries offer everything from sushi to burritos, millions of children are dying due to a lack of food.

    Last month's report by the Indian charity Naandi Foundation, the first comprehensive data since a 2005/6 study, said India's "nutrition crisis" is an attributable cause for up to half of all child deaths.

    Yet India's public spending on health, estimated at 1.2 percent of its GDP in 2009, is among the lowest in the world.

    Remembering India's first woman photojournalist

    "This isn't a quick-fix that we're looking at here, it's not a magic bullet," said Jasmine Whitbread, CEO of Save the Children International.

    "Not just in India, but in countries around the world, we know that you can't just rely on trickle down. There have to be policies in place, there have got to be political choices that prioritize malnutrition."

    In Shivpuri, an impoverished tribal-dominated district in Madhya Pradesh state, that reality is on full display.

    The region's malnutrition level for children under five matches the national average, but child mortality rates are worse at 103 deaths per 1,000. The national average is 66 deaths per 1,000, according to U.N. children's agency, Unicef.

    Most of the children here are from India's most marginalized and poorest communities, such as tribals and lower castes where literacy is poor and poverty high.

    Their mothers are themselves often undernourished, forced into early marriage when they reach puberty, and give birth to underweight babies with weak immune systems.

    Illiteracy or lack of awareness takes its toll as well. These mothers do not breastfeed, offering buffalo milk and contaminated water instead and making their children prone to illnesses like diarrhea, which prevents nutrient absorption.

    Mostly living on less than $2 a day, these families can hardly afford anything beyond wheat chapatis that are devoid of much-needed protein and other nutrients.

    Soapy milk, toxic apples: food safety in India

    India's neglect of its young - 48 percent are stunted, 20 percent wasted and 70 percent anemic - will have serious repercussions. The World Bank says malnutrition in the poorest countries slashes around 3 percent from annual economic growth.

    In comparison, neighboring China has already achieved its target on malnutrition and under-five child mortality goals as its economic growth has been more broad-based, focusing on health, sanitation and small holder production.

    While India has several schemes already running to battle malnutrition, the Indian government is now vaunting a multi-billion-dollar food subsidy program as a possible solution.

    But the Food Security Bill, which guarantees cut-price rice and wheat to 63.5 percent of the population may be more a political gimmick, experts worry, than about providing nutritious food to those who need it most.

    "The Food Security Bill is a very good development, but it is a food security bill, not a nutrition security bill," said Lawrence Haddad, director of the U.K.-based Institute of Development Studies.

    For the children at Shivpuri's nutrition centre, government plans mean little unless they put enough of the right food in their stomachs.

    "You see her arms? They are almost the width of my thumb," says Jharna, as she carried her limp, emaciated one-year-old grand-daughter, Sakshi, into the clinic. "She is too weak. She can't even sit by herself."

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Report: These tech companies sell spy tools to dictators
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    • Yes, Jeremy Lin is big in China -- but China is also very big
    • Michael McFaul, a laid-back Yankee in trouble in Putin's court

     

    74 comments

    Time to educate these backward cultures that women have the right to say no to sex and constant breeding. What mother wants her kids to die like this? None do! But delve into every story and you discover this is the 6th, 7th or 8th child.

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    Explore related topics: india, aid, child, hunger, poverty, featured
  • 26
    Jan
    2012
    5:48pm, EST

    Homeless mothers and children find a lifeline at Hope Gardens

    Photos by Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    Lilly Earp, 8, changes the diaper of her five-week-old sister Emily, Jan. 25, 2012, in their apartment at Hope Gardens Family Center, a homeless shelter for women and children, run by Union Rescue Mission on 77 acres of countryside on the outskirts of Los Angeles, Calif.

    By Lucy Nicholson, Reuters photojournalist

    Lilly Earp changes the diaper on her 5-week-old baby sister Emily with the confidence another child would have cradling a doll. She's only 8, but she already shows the street smarts of an older child as she helps her mother. It helps to be resourceful when you're homeless.

    Her mother, Doreen Earp, 38, who is originally from Germany, and her three children ended up on the street after her relationship with Emily’s father fell apart. They stayed in a hotel for a month, then with people from their church and eventually ended up with no roof over their heads.

    Children attend an after-school class at Hope Gardens Family Center. One in 45 children, totalling 1.6 million, is homeless, the highest number in United States' history, according to a 2011 study by the National Center on Family Homelessness.

    A child's drawing is seen on the wall of the center.

    Today, they're lucky to be among the 150 or so homeless women and children living at Hope Gardens on the outskirts of LA. It's a place where those at the end of the line are given a life line.

    The shelter for families is an oasis compared to where most of LA's massive street population lives on a grim patch of downtown's Skid Row. While homeless services are concentrated downtown, it's no place for a child.

    Doreen Earp, 38, of Germany looks at her five-week-old daughter Emily in their apartment at Hope Gardens Family Center.

    The number of homeless children is at an all-time high in the United States. One in 45 children, totaling 1.6 million, is currently homeless, according to a 2011 study by the National Center on Family Homelessness. California is ranked the fifth highest state in the nation for its percentage of homeless children. An increasing number of children are dependent on poverty-stricken single moms.

    The Earps are amongst 45 mothers, 96 children, and 24 elderly women being helped by Hope Gardens, a homeless shelter for women and children, run by Union Rescue Mission on 77 acres (0.31 square km) of countryside on the outskirts of Los Angeles.

    Elizabeth Lepe, 26, (left to right) Nancy Jimenez, 35, and Sheriill Stubblefield, 31, laugh during a therapy session at Hope Gardens Family Center.

    The mothers are given therapy, and classes in life skills, parenting, financial planning, and encouraged to apply for further education, so they can get more than minimum wage jobs. They can stay at the center for up to three years if they’re in college.

    All the children attend after-school classes, and the teenagers are taught about domestic violence, job interviews, how to have healthy relationships, and how to communicate better.

    Kids grow up fast when they lose the safety and comforts of home.

    Earp's 10-year-old daughter Lindzy overhears a woman telling her mother that she is going to an NA (Narcotics Anonymous) meeting. Lindzy persists in quizzing her mother about what that means. After hearing her explain it as simply a class, the girl retorts: “I know what NA is. I just wanted to see what you would say.”

    These moments of maturity are eclipsed by the normal trappings of childhood at the shelter – the games and toys that replace those the children lost with their homes.

    Doreen nurses her newborn as her older daughters run and shriek in the playground with other children. Birds chirp in the surrounding pine trees. A stream gurgles into a koi pond.

    “They’re able to be kids here,” she says.

    Lindzy Earp (2nd right), 10, plays in the playground at Hope Gardens Family Center.

    See more of Lucy Nicholson's picture story about Hope Gardens and an earlier set of photos of an after-school tuition program for homeless kids.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    117 comments

    Don't tell the compassionate republicans,or they will have both moms and babies thrown out in the street for being lazy.

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  • 23
    Jan
    2012
    4:11pm, EST

    Fire burns through a slum neighborhood in Equatorial Guinea

    Photos by Rebecca Blackwell / AP

    Local residents throw buckets of water on a burning house as a fire destroyed dozens of homes, in the New Building slum neighborhood.

    Residents carry rescued furniture out of the New Building slum neighborhood as others stand on a wall and watch fire burn through dozens of homes in central Malabo, Equatorial Guinea, Jan. 23, 2012.

    Residents fought the fire with buckets of waste water while firefighters struggled to get enough water pressure. Equatorial Guinea and Gabon are currently co-hosting the African Cup of Nations soccer tournament.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

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