Editorial: HKFP photo by Britt Clennett wins honourable mention at Human Rights Press Awards
Hong Kong Free Press
Hong Kong Free Press has won an honourable mention for photography at the 2023 Human Rights Press Awards.
A shot by Britt Clennett, which shows a worker rolling up a “Hong Kong Asia’s World City” banner as police officers pass by – won a prize in the Single Image category.
A photograph of a family leaving Afghanistan featured in the New York Times won the category prize.
“These awards recognise the journalists who are shedding light on some of the most critical issues of our time in Asia,” said executive director of Human Rights Watch Tirana Hassan in a press release. “This kind of journalism, often undertaken in extraordinarily difficult conditions, is essential to exposing human rights abuses and we are thrilled to honour these courageous reporters.”
In all, there were 406 submissions across 33 countries for 16 categories of awards.
Other winners included Hong Kong’s Ming Pao for their reporting on the fifth wave of Covid-19, Reuters for their investigative reporting on the Myanmar military’s abuses against the Rohingya, and The Reporter for its features on the human trafficking of African students by Taiwanese universities.
FCC axes awards
The 2023 prizes were administered by NGO Human Rights Watch and the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism in the US after Hong Kong’s Foreign Correspondents’ Club (FCC) relinquished responsibility for the awards last year.
In a statement at the time, the club cited legal risks “red lines,” amid the national security law, but the move prompted members of the club’s press freedom committee to resign. After the club axed the 2022 awards presentation, Human Rights Watch published the list of last year’s winners in full on Wednesday, Press Freedom Day.
The FCC has not made a statement about local press freedom issues for almost half a year.
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