A survivor of the deadly 6.8 magnitude September 8 earthquake cries as she sits on the rubble of her damaged house, in the mountain village of Moulay Brahim in al-Haouz province in central Morocco.
A woman waits as emergency personnel open a road to her village in the mountainous area of Tizi N'Test, in the Taroudant province, one of the most devastated in quake-hit Morocco. Medics treated a constant flow of casualties after Morocco's strongest-ever earthquake killed more than 2,800 people, but on September 12 hopes of finding more survivors under the rubble were fading.
A Moroccan soldier takes cares for a man sitting on rubble in the mountainous area of Tizi N'Test, in the Taroudant province, one of the most devastated in quake-hit Morocco.
The death toll in the earthquake has passed 2800. The rescue operation is still underway in the country in order to find the survivors. Search and rescue teams from Spain, the United Kingdom, and Qatar have joined Moroccan rescue efforts.
Meanwhile, experts say the most direct way to provide aid to those affected in the city of Marrakech and the rural areas in the Atlas Mountains is to donate to organisations that have operations already on the ground in Morocco.
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