Lhssan Asoki's neighbor will never forget the screams he heard when Asoki realized his family was dead.
Just moments earlier, Asoki was sleeping at his home in the mountain village of Moulay Brahim. Then everything started to shake as the center of Morocco was hit with its strongest earthquake in more than a century.
Asoki's house collapsed. He was able to escape, but not his wife, nor his three children — ages 3, 6 and a baby born just two days earlier.
"He started shouting for help," photographer Ximena Borrazás said. "The neighbors came to the scene and they took out the bodies. They were all dead."
Borrazás has spent the past couple of days photographing some of the villages most affected by Friday night's earthquake. At least 2,800 people have died in the country, and the death toll is expected to rise as more people are found in the rubble.
These mountain villages are difficult to access, with narrow and winding roads, and some of those roads were still blocked Monday because of massive boulders that had rolled down the steep hills. This has impeded the delivery of aid.
"They don't have medicines. They don't have doctors," Borrazás said. "They have nothing."