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  • A 330-feet deep sinkhole that opened up on February 23 in the San Antonio neighborhood of Zone 6 in Guatemala City, Guatemala. The sinkhole claimed at least three victims. Authorities evacuated the area surrounding the hole and have it cordoned off. The hole emits foul odor and the sound of rushing water.
    070309 guatemala sinkhole 003.dng
  • A 330-feet deep sinkhole that opened up on February 23 in the San Antonio neighborhood of Zone 6 in Guatemala City, Guatemala. The sinkhole claimed at least three victims, all from the same family that lived in the house seen at right. Authorities evacuated the area surrounding the hole and have it cordoned off. The hole emits foul odor and the sound of rushing water.
    070309 guatemala sinkhole 001.dng
  • Guatemalan soldiers patrol an area near a 330-feet deep sinkhole that opened up on February 23 in the San Antonio neighborhood of Zone 6 in Guatemala City, Guatemala. The sinkhole claimed at least three victims. Authorities evacuated the area surrounding the hole and have it cordoned off. The hole emits foul odor and the sound of rushing water.
    070309 guatemala sinkhole 002.tif
  • A view of Guatemala City, Guatemala.
    061505 guatemala city 001.dng
  • A view of Guatemala City, Guatemala.
    delacalle016.dng
  • Pilar Lopez, coordinator of the Guatemalan non-governmental organization Medicos Sin Fronteras, said she believes there to be about 3,000 children and young adults living on the streets of Guatemala City, partially shown here from an overlook in the surrounding mountains<br />
    061905guate003.jpg
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zona 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday, June 13, 2005. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    delacalle010.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zona 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday, June 13, 2005. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    delacalle023.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zona 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday, June 13, 2005. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate233.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate247.dng
  • Ubelia, a four-year-old Guatemalan girl, drinks soda offered by representatives of the NGO "Nuestros Derechos" on a sidewalk that borders the upscale Zona Viva in Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005. Ubelia is one of seven children that live with their parents, including mother Claudia Leticia Roque Jolón (cq), next to the giant trash dump in Zone 3. Claudia, 35, said she has lived in El Basurero for 7 years, and has spent 12 years living in the street. The family lives now in a two-room shanty with dirt floors, a garbage- and filth-strewn back yard and scores of flies.
    delacalle026.dng
  • Sandra Guamux, 21, sits with her five-month-old son, Alfredo, at an abandoned gas station in Zone 4 of Guatemala City, Guatemala. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains. Guamux said a baby was stolen from her five days after it was born last year, and she is convinced the baby went into an illegal adoption system. She added that the police told her they would not investigate the situation since she had no photograph of the child.
    delacalle014.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate263.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate261.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate259.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zona 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday, June 13, 2005. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061505 guatekids123.dng
  • A street child, dressed as a clown, performs for money in Zone 11 in Guatemala City, Guatemala on Friday, March 9, 2007.
    delacalle001.tif
  • Plaza de la Constitucionalidad and the Palacio Nacional in Guatemala City, Guatemala.
    061705 palacio nacional 001.dng
  • Sandra Guamux, 21, sits with her five-month-old son, Alfredo, at an abandoned gas station in Zone 4 of Guatemala City, Guatemala. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains. Guamux said a baby was stolen from her five days after it was born last year, and she is convinced the baby went into an illegal adoption system. She added that the police told her they would not investigate the situation since she had no photograph of the child.
    delacalle013.dng
  • A hallway in the children's court of the Organismo Judicial in Guatemala City, Guatemala.
    delacalle024.dng
  • A hallway in the children's court of the Organismo Judicial in Guatemala City, Guatemala.
    061505 guatekids001.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate291_1_1.dng
  • Street teenagers Julio and Aura make out in Guatemala City's Zone 8. Pilar Lopez, coordinator of Medicos Sin Fronteras, said street kids often come to her clinic with sexually transmitted diseases. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    delacalle027.dng
  • A street child, dressed as a clown, performs for money in Zone 11 in Guatemala City, Guatemala on Friday, March 9, 2007.
    070309 street clown 001.tif
  • People look at an automobile in Guatemala City, Guatemala in which two people were shot to death the previous night. Local papers said the two were killed by about six gunmen who shot more than 120 rounds into the car. It was said to be an assassination connected to the narcotics trade.
    062205 drug killing car 002.dng
  • People look at an automobile in Guatemala City, Guatemala in which two people were shot to death the previous night. Local papers said the two were killed by about six gunmen who shot more than 120 rounds into the car. It was said to be an assassination connected to the narcotics trade.
    062205 drug killing car 001.dng
  • Plaza de la Constitucionalidad and the Palacio Nacional in Guatemala City, Guatemala.
    061705 palacio nacional 002.dng
  • Jorge, 15, huffs solvent from a soaked ball of cloth. Guatemala's street kids mainly use paint thinner instead of glue, as it is cheaper and gives them a sense of relief from hunger pains and cold nights. A small bottle of paint thinner costs less than a dollar.
    delacalle006.dng
  • About 20 teenagers and young adults live at an abandoned gas station in Guatemala City's Zone 4. Human waste litters the grounds.. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains.
    delacalle009.dng
  • A young Mayan girl sits with a police officer in the children's court in Guatemala City. The officer said he found her alone, begging for money in the central park. The girl said her closest relatives are her parents in Quiche, hundreds of miles from the capitol.
    delacalle025.dng
  • Joel Luna, who believes he is 18, shows a surgical scar made when doctors pulled a private guard's bullet from his back and tried to repair the damage. Luna said a friend stole a cell phone in Guatemala City, and as Luna ran the guard shot him in the back.
    delacalle022.dng
  • Floyd and his wife Leigh, a couple from North Carolina in the United States, sit with their newly adopted baby, Blake, in the Marriott hotel in Guatemala City, Guatemala on Saturday, June 18, 2005. Floyd, who declined to give his last name, said he expects that he and his wife will pay about U.S. $30,000 in total for Blake's adoption process, then the same again for another Guatemalan baby they plan to adopt.
    061805adoptive_parents.dng
  • About 20 teenagers and young adults live at an abandoned gas station in Guatemala City's Zone 4. Human waste litters the grounds.. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains.
    delacalle011.dng
  • About 20 teenagers and young adults live at an abandoned gas station in Guatemala City's Zone 4. Human waste litters the grounds.. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains.
    delacalle012.dng
  • A child finds slight refuge on the stoop of a store as he sleeps in Guatemala City's Zone 8.
    delacalle005.dng
  • A child finds slight refuge on the stoop of a store as he sleeps in Guatemala City's Zone 8.
    062205 guate strt kids154.dng
  • People look at an automobile in Guatemala City, Guatemala in which two people were shot to death the previous night. Local papers said the two were killed by about six gunmen who shot more than 120 rounds into the car. It was said to be an assassination connected to the narcotics trade.
    062205 drug killing car 003.psd
  • Juan Carlos Figueroa spends his nights on a corner in Gautemala City's Zone 8. In his cupped hand he holds a ball of cloth soaked with paint thinner for huffing. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    delacalle015.dng
  • Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, takes a phone call in the children's court of the Organismo Judicial in Guatemala City.
    delacalle019.dng
  • Carlos Toledo, founder and director of Nuestros Derechos, a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that works for the rights and rehabilitation of street children, speaks with a former street youth at juvenile court on Wednesday, June 15, 2005 in Guatemala City.
    061505_carlos_toledo.dng
  • About 20 teenagers and young adults live at an abandoned gas station in Guatemala City's Zone 4. Human waste litters the grounds.. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains. The NGO Nuestros Derechos was visiting on this night.
    061705 guatekids116.dng
  • Wilma Janet Chacon (left), a 17-year-old girl who at times is a niña de la calle, speaks with Carlos Toledo and Alejandro Estrado of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, in the children's court of the Organismo Judicial in Guatemala City. Toledo and Estrada were helping Chacon try to get joint custody of the child she had with another street child who has since reformed himself. The court said she had to stay off the streets in order to have any custody. Not long after, she chose the streets.
    061505 guatekids055.dng
  • A child's doll lays stuck in filth behind a dwelling in Guatemala City's massive trash dump, where people over 14 years old are allowed to spend their days rummaging for recyclables.
    delacalle021.dng
  • A child finds slight refuge on the stoop of a store as he sleeps in Guatemala City's Zone 8.
    062205 guate strt kids136.dng
  • Carlos Toledo (center), director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, talks to Wilma Janet Chacon (right), a 17-year-old girl who at times is a niña de la calle, in the children's court of the Organismo Judicial in Guatemala City. Toledo and Alejandro Estrada (left) were helping Chacon try to get joint custody of the child she had with another street child who has since reformed himself. The court said she had to stay off the streets in order to have any custody. Not long after, she chose the streets.
    061505 guatekids029.dng
  • Teens gather plastic in Guatemala City's massive trash dump, where people over 14 years old are allowed to spend their days rummaging for recyclables.
    delacalle020.psd
  • About 20 teenagers and young adults live at an abandoned gas station in Guatemala City's Zone 4. Human waste litters the grounds.. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains.
    061705 guatekids055.dng
  • A man huffing paint thinner sits in one of Guatemala City's massive trash dumps, where people make a meager income rummaging for recyclable debris.
    delacalle028.dng
  • Joel Luna (left), who believes he is 18, walks in a wash area at Nuestros Derechos, a non-governmental organization that works with street kids. Luna said a friend stole a cell phone in Guatemala City, and as Luna ran the guard shot him in the back.
    061405 guatekids014.dng
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set7.dng
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set5.dng
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set3.dng
  • Joel Luna (left), who believes he is 18, speaks with a Ajejandro, a worker at Nuestros Derechos, a non-governmental organization that works with street kids. Luna said a friend stole a cell phone in Guatemala City, and as Luna ran the guard shot him in the back.
    061405 guatekids003.dng
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set2.dng
  • A man addicted to huffing paint thinner sits in one of Guatemala City's massive trash dumps, where people make a meager income rummaging for recyclable debris.
    061405 guatekids059.dng
  • One of Guatemala City's massive trash dumps, where people make a meager income rummaging for recyclable debris.
    061405 guatekids037A.dng
  • Housing in one of Guatemala City's massive trash dumps, where people make a meager income rummaging for recyclable debris.
    061405 guatekids020.dng
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set4.dng
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer055.dng
  • Children in of Guatemala City's massive trash dumps, where people make a meager income rummaging for recyclable debris.
    061405 guatekids058.dng
  • Plastic bags caught in barbed wire in one of Guatemala City's massive trash dumps, where people make a meager income rummaging for recyclable debris.
    061405 guatekids051.dng
  • One of Guatemala City's massive trash dumps, where people make a meager income rummaging for recyclable debris.
    061405 guatekids043.dng
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set6.dng
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set1.dng
  • Housing in one of Guatemala City's massive trash dumps, where people make a meager income rummaging for recyclable debris.
    061405 guatekids029.dng
  • Joel Luna (left), who believes he is 18, speaks with a Ajejandro, a worker at Nuestros Derechos, a non-governmental organization that works with street kids. Luna said a friend stole a cell phone in Guatemala City, and as Luna ran the guard shot him in the back.
    061405 guatekids009.dng
  • Wilma Janet Chacon (left), 17, learns at a children's court that she will not be given custody of her daughter until she proves that she will stay off the street and off drugs. Geovanni Marroquín, the child's father at right, is a reformed former street youth now back at home and in school. The mediator told Chacon she has two months to straighten up. A week later, she was back on the streets.
    delacalle018.dng
  • A young girl juggles at an intersection in hopes of a few Quetzales from drivers. Poor Guatemalan children are often sent off to bring in money for families that cannot afford to feed them.
    delacalle008.dng
  • A street child shows off one of his few possessions--a photograph of his younger brother in an elementary school graduation uniform.
    delacalle017.dng
  • Wilma Janet Chacon, 17, spends a few minutes with her 10-month-old baby, Kimberly, outside the children's court. During mediation, Chacon was told she has two months to prove that she will stay off the street and off drugs in order to share custody of her daughter with the child's father, now a reformed former street youth. A week later, she chose the streets.
    061505 guatekids048.dng
  • Wilma Janet Chacon, 17, spends a few minutes with her 10-month-old baby, Kimberly, outside the children's court. During mediation, Chacon was told she has two months to prove that she will stay off the street and off drugs in order to share custody of her daughter with the child's father, now a reformed former street youth. A week later, she chose the streets.
    061505 guatekids036.dng
  • Wilma Janet Chacon, 17, spends a few minutes with her 10-month-old baby, Kimberly, outside the children's court. During mediation, Chacon was told she has two months to prove that she will stay off the street and off drugs in order to share custody of her daughter with the child's father, now a reformed former street youth. A week later, she chose the streets.
    061505 guatekids049.dng
  • Wilma Janet Chacon, 17, spends a few minutes with her 10-month-old baby, Kimberly, outside the children's court. During mediation, Chacon was told she has two months to prove that she will stay off the street and off drugs in order to share custody of her daughter with the child's father, now a reformed former street youth. A week later, she chose the streets.
    061505 guatekids042.dng
  • These children at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government, are some of those found in 2003 in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_guate_children.dng
  • Aerial view of parque central in Antigua Guatemala on Friday, Sept. 28, 2018.
    20180928 drone antigua guatemala-251.tif
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 320.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 283.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 264.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 197.jpg
  • Police arrive to help others contain protests by indigenous people against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 189.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 009.jpg
  • Police run to help others contain protests by indigenous people against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 129.jpg
  • Police and soldiers pack up after indigenous people demonstrated against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 356.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 315.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 254.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 213.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 205.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 181.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 169.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 164.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 158.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 105.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 084.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 066.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 031.jpg
  • Indigenous people demonstrate against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 142.jpg
  • Police run to help others contain protests by indigenous people against U.S. President Bush in Tecpán Guatemala, Guatemala. Townspeople watch from afar on the street above. Bush visited a nearby Mayan site, Iximché.
    070312 tecpan guatemala 123.jpg
  • Aerial of volcanoes at dusk near Antigua, Guatemala. Volcan de Fuego (at left) is active, while neighboring Acatanenango remains inactive. Ciudad Vieja, below, was once a capital of the Spanish empire in Central America.
    20220212 Guatemala sunset volcanoes
  • Aerial view of parque central in Antigua Guatemala on Friday, Sept. 28, 2018.
    20180928 drone antigua guatemala-88.tif
  • Aerial view of parque central in Antigua Guatemala on Friday, Sept. 28, 2018.
    20180928 drone antigua guatemala-1.tif
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