HKFP Lens: World Press Photo announces regional winners for Asia
Hong Kong Free Press
The regional winners of the 2024 World Press Photo Contest were announced on Wednesday, honouring the best photojournalism and photography produced over the past year.
Palestinian photographer Mohammad Salem’s image of 36-year-old Inas Abu Maamar holding the body of her five-year-old niece Saly, who was killed along with four other family members when an Israeli missile struck their home in Khan Younis, Gaza, on October 17, 2023.
Salem described the image, captured soon after his wife had given birth, as a “powerful and sad moment that sums up the broader sense of what was happening in the Gaza Strip.”
Stories: Afghanistan on the Edge
Associated Press photographer Ebrahim Noroozi’s series titled “Afghanistan on the Edge” was awarded in the Stories category.
Noroozi’s images reveal the hard reality of life for many Afghans as they navigate existence in a war-devastated economy on the verge of collapse and impacted by the withdrawal of foreign aid. The jury said they “felt this powerful, human-centered story demonstrates how photographers can show the realities of intersecting crises.”
Long-term Project: I Am Still With You
Wang Naigong’s “I Am Still With You,” a visual record of the final years of a young mother of three in northern China, Jiuer, won the Long-term Projects category.
Before undergoing surgery for cancer, Jiuer invited Wang to take some family photos, and later, when her condition deteriorated, asked the photographer to record the time she spent with her children.
Open Format: Heartstrings
The winner of the Open Format category was Kazuhiko Matsumara’s story “Heartstrings” for The Kyoto Shimbun, which sought to visualise both the social issues surrounding dementia and the inner lives of those with dementia and their relationships with family members and carers.
Japan’s aging population has one of the highest proportions of elderly people with dementia in the world, with about 7 million citizens expected to be living with symptoms in 2025.
Honourable Mention: The Edge
Zishaan A Latif’s project “The Edge,” supported by the Shyama Foundation Shared Ecologies Photo Grant 2022-23, won an Honourable Mention.
Latif captured the Miya community, who depend on land near the transnational Brahmaputra River for their livelihood and their identity in the eyes of the state. As their land erodes due to worsening floods, they face a fight against both nature and nation.
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https://hongkongfp.com/2024/04/07/hkfp-lens-world-press-photo-announces-regional-winners-for-asia/