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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/10/Rc4HB.St.138.jpeg|405Three hundred people a day arrive at the Atma camp for displaced persons in northern Syria, adding to the 20,000 already there. There's no heat, water or electricity in the flimsy tents, which allow water in during rainstorms. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/10/amVid.St.138.jpeg|422Three hundred people a day arrive at the Atma camp for displaced persons in northern Syria, adding to the 20,000 already there. There's no heat, water or electricity in the flimsy tents, which allow water in during rainstorms. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/10/18eAfG.St.138.jpeg|415Three hundred people a day arrive at the Atma camp for displaced persons in northern Syria, adding to the 20,000 already there. There's no heat, water or electricity in the flimsy tents, which allow water in during rainstorms. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/09/zbp2Z.St.138.jpeg|410Three hundred people a day arrive at the Atma camp for displaced persons in northern Syria, adding to the 20,000 already there. There's no heat, water or electricity in the flimsy tents, which allow water in during rainstorms. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/09/zC1or.St.138.jpeg|409Three hundred people a day arrive at the Atma camp for displaced persons in northern Syria, adding to the 20,000 already there. There's no heat, water or electricity in the flimsy tents, which allow water in during rainstorms. The barbed wire fence marking the border with Turkey is used as a clothesline. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/09/PDC7g.St.138.jpeg|525Three hundred people a day arrive at the Atma camp for displaced persons in northern Syria, adding to the 20,000 already there. There's no heat, water or electricity in the flimsy tents, which allow water in during rainstorms. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/08/81sSA.St.138.jpeg|406Three hundred people a day arrive at the Atma camp for displaced persons in northern Syria, adding to the 20,000 already there. There's no heat, water or electricity in the flimsy tents, which allow water in during rainstorms. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/08/1kI0P8.St.138.jpeg|403Three hundred people a day arrive at the Atma camp for displaced persons in northern Syria, adding to the 20,000 already there. There's no heat, water or electricity in the flimsy tents, which allow water in during rainstorms. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/08/12rind.St.138.jpeg|392Three hundred people a day arrive at the Atma camp for displaced persons in northern Syria, adding to the 20,000 already there. There's no heat, water or electricity in the flimsy tents, which allow water in during rainstorms. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/07/u6Zbo.St.138.jpeg|420At Azaz camp for displaced Syrians, more than 12,000 are housed in the 1000 tents, but there's a waiting list for 1400 more tents, and in the meantime families must live in nearby villages, which are subject to government bombing raids. The tents are heated with a simple coal stove, but the gases, which have no room to escape in the close quarters, cause respiratory ailments. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/07/mcx5A.St.138.jpeg|411Three hundred people a day arrive at the Atma camp for displaced persons in northern Syria, adding to the 20,000 already there. There's no heat, water or electricity in the flimsy tents, which allow water in during rainstorms. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/07/10wAJu.St.138.jpeg|419Three hundred people a day arrive at the Atma camp for displaced persons in northern Syria, adding to the 20,000 already there. There's no heat, water or electricity in the flimsy tents, which allow water in during rainstorms. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/06/oe5er.St.138.jpeg|525A child poses for a photograph at Azaz camp for the internaliy displaced in northern Syria. Under attack by the Syrian army, their families fled their home towns and villages, often with only the clothes on their back. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/06/eB98W.St.138.jpeg|525At Azaz camp for displaced Syrians, more than 12,000 are housed in the 1000 tents, but there's a waiting list for 1400 more tents, and in the meantime families must live in nearby villages, which are subject to government bombing raids. The tents are heated with a simple coal stove, but the gases, which have no room to escape in the close quarters, cause respiratory ailments. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/06/po3aL.St.138.jpeg|417At Azaz camp for displaced Syrians, more than 12,000 are housed in the 1000 tents, but there's a waiting list for 1400 more tents, and in the meantime families must live in nearby villages, which are subject to government bombing raids. The tents are heated with a simple coal stove, but the gases, which have no room to escape in the close quarters, cause respiratory ailments. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/05/XYKqk.St.138.jpeg|386At Azaz camp for displaced Syrians, more than 12,000 are housed in the 1000 tents, but there's a waiting list for 1400 more tents, and in the meantime families must live in nearby villages, which are subject to government bombing raids. The tents are heated with a simple coal stove, but the gases, which have no room to escape in the close quarters, cause respiratory ailments. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/05/1pcaxu.St.138.jpeg|525At Azaz camp for displaced Syrians, more than 12,000 are housed in the 1000 tents, but there's a waiting list for 1400 more tents, and in the meantime families must live in nearby villages, which are subject to government bombing raids. The tents are heated with a simple coal stove, but the gases, which have no room to escape in the close quarters, cause respiratory ailments. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/05/hE092.St.138.jpeg|525A child poses for a photograph at Azaz camp for the internaliy displaced in northern Syria. Under attack by the Syrian army, their families fled their home towns and villages, often with only the clothes on their back. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/05/Igqrj.St.138.jpeg|525A child poses for a photograph at Azaz camp for the internaliy displaced in northern Syria. Under attack by the Syrian army, their families fled their home towns and villages, often with only the clothes on their back. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/04/s4qnf.St.138.jpeg|418Three hundred people a day arrive at the Atma camp for displaced persons in northern Syria, adding to the 20,000 already there. There's no heat, water or electricity in the flimsy tents, which allow water in during rainstorms. And the camp has run out of tents. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/02/08/16/03/1bScVQ.St.138.jpeg|525A child poses for a photograph at Azaz camp for the internaliy displaced in northern Syria. Under attack by the Syrian army, their families fled their home towns and villages, often with only the clothes on their back. (Andree Kaiser/MCT)
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