World Food Program
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South Sudan
Workers unload food for distribution at the Yida refugee camp in Unity State, South Sudan on Saturday May 12, 2012. More than 30,000 refugees currently reside in Yida having fled war between the government of the Republic of Sudan and rebel forces in South Kordofan. In recent weeks, aid agencies have reported a steep influx of new arrivals, at times exceeding 700 per day. Most arrive in need of food, medical treatment and other basic services. The United Nations World Food Program is aiming to stockpile 500 metric tons of food supplies in Yida in order to sustain the population through the imminent rain season during which the remote camp will become inaccessible by road. (AP Photo/Pete Muller)
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Sri Lanka Cluster Munitions.JPEG
FILE - In this May 23, 2009 file photo, an abandoned U.N. World Food Program vehicle sits amidst the devastation, in this aerial photo showing part of the former conflict zone on the north east coast of Sri Lanka. On Thursday, April 26, 2012, The Associated Press obtained a copy of an email, saying unexploded cluster munitions have been found in northern Sri Lanka, appearing to confirm, for the first time, that they were used in that country's long civil war. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth, File)
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Withers shuffles secondary
The UNC coach addresses the media after practice Thursday and discusses how the Heels will adjust with the injury to cornerback Jabari Price.
articulate about what I would do -- it. I don't -- and world food and no word. This is really taught over -- the defense speak for -- definitely have a wide receiver. I think it's -
Frazier anxious to get started rebuilding NCCU
New North Carolina Central football coach Henry Frazier III discussed his new job with Adam Gold and Joe Ovies.
to the national player all along the UN CAA championship. It's legal World Food Program has been bailed him at a school -- don't want it or you -- the art Soviet art who. Who called Jameel -
Hagan welcomes home Bragg soldiers
Sen. Kay Hagan was on hand to welcome home Fort Bragg soldiers as they arrived home from a 40-day relief mission in quake-devastated Haiti.
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Bragg soldiers on their way home
More than 700 Fort Bragg-based soldiers coming home after more than 40 days in Haiti providing relief to earthquake victims.
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Haiti to resettle 400,000 quake victims to camps
Within days, the government will move 400,000 people made homeless by Haiti's epic earthquake from their squalid improvised camps throughout the shattered capital to new resettlement areas on the outskirts, a top Haitian official said Thursday.
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Powerful aftershock hits Haiti; Civilian doctors arrive
The most powerful aftershock yet struck Haiti on Wednesday, shaking more rubble from damaged buildings and sending screaming people running into the streets eight days after the country's capital was devastated by an apocalyptic quake.
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U.S., U.N. send more troops to help in Haiti
U.S. troops landed on the lawn of Haiti's shattered presidential palace to the cheers of quake victims on Tuesday, and the U.N. said it would throw more police and soldiers into the sluggish global effort to aid the devastated country.
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Death toll rises; aid distribution spreads
The latest casualty report, from the European Commission citing Haitian government figures, doubled previous estimates of the dead to approximately 200,000, with some 70,000 bodies recovered and trucked off to mass graves.
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