Fabienne Geismar died after being shot by police. The pictures she had looted lie beneath her face.
She lies limp on the ground, killed by a single shot to the head.
Crushed beneath her bloodied face, are the garish paintings which she paid for with her life.
But Fabienne Geismar was not one of 4,500 prisoners to escape after the Haiti earthquake broke Port-au-Prince prison apart.
Fabienne had survived the quake which devastated the family home but died in its aftermath, laying face down in her own blood beside the rubble and the pictures she was said to have been stealing.
In recent days the city has become so used to the sight of dead bodies that she hardly drew a glance as she lay crumpled, clad in a pink and grey top and pink skirt, he flimsy shoes still resting on her feet.
Her father Osam, sister Samantha and brother Jeff had watched helpless as she was cut down by a bullet in the ruins of Marthely Seeiee Street.
Later they returned with a cart to collect her body. Her mother Armante stood wailing, barely able to stand as she was supported by relatives Armante Cherisma cries in front of the body of her daughter
Later they returned with a cart to collect her body. Her mother Armante stood wailing, barely able to stand as she was supported by relatives Armante Cherisma cries in front of the body of her daughter
As a small crowd watched, her 52-year-old father lifted Fabienne from the ground and then laid her on a cart before breaking down in tears.
It is unclear whether police deliberately aimed at looters, who had targeted properties destroyed in the earthquake, or had been firing warning shots over their heads.
Fears of widespread violence and looting have eased in Haiti as U.S. troops provided security for water and food aid deliveries, and thousands of displaced Haitians heeded the government's advice to seek shelter outside Port-au-Prince
While military escorts still are needed to deliver relief supplies, the United Nations said security problems were mainly in areas considered "high risk" before the quake.
"The overall security situation in Port-au-Prince remains stable, with limited, localized violence and looting occurring," the U.N. Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs saidRead more:
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