日常生活類組照金獎作品。 帶著假肢生活 Living with plastic leg 孩子是阿富汗戰(zhàn)爭最大的受害者,有的成為孤兒,有的被地雷傷害,有的成為難民,成千上萬的兒童被過去30年來的沖突所影響。8歲的阿克拉姆就是其中的一個例子,沖突迫使他的父母帶他離開移居到巴基斯坦,他像乞丐一樣生活,被高壓電傷害,手被截肢。所幸,他從ICRC組織獲得了一個假肢。 Children are the victims of Afghanistan's wars. Whether becoming orphans after losing their parents to the conflict, getting injured by landmines and leftover ordnance, or being forced into becoming a refugee, thousands of children have been affected over the past thirty years by the conflicts that roiled Afghanistan. Eight-year-old Akram is a case in point. The conflict forced his parents to leave Jalal Abad and migrated to Pakistan in Pishawa. Forced to live like beggars, Akram was struck by a high-voltage electricity current while foraging through rubbish. His hand dried up from the shock and had to be amputated. Six months ago, the family judged that the situation was safe enough to return to Afghanistan. Today they live in a tent-city next to the once-grand, now bombed-out Darolaman Palace in Kabul, one of the war's signature buildings. The family busy themselves with making bricks for up to $2 a day in southern Kabul's polluted brick works. When even this work is not available, he gathers rubbish or begs along with his children in Kabul's streets. Akram spends his time gathering rubbish for sale. Now that he received his new plastic leg from the ICRC, he is no longer ashamed of being one-handed. Now, his greatest wish is to go to school. 
2010年11月,快樂的阿克拉姆 Akram is happy.
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