PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - Every morning as the sun rises over the dusty, overgrown ruins of the Haitian capital's iconic cathedral, Paul Christandro, who lived nearby all his life, thinks about the day ten years ago when he watched it come down, killing his friends.

International organizations pledged billions of dollars in aid as the scale of the disaster became obvious, though with Christandro and many others still in temporary housing its use has come under intense scrutiny.
"Every day when I get up, I think about it," said the 23-year-old Christandro under the scorching Caribbean sun in the capital Port-au-Prince.