International

Moonlit image wins World Press Photo

Moonlit image wins World Press Photo

February 14, 2014 | 09:47 PM

This picture released by the World Press yesterday shows the image taken by American photographer John Stanmeyer of the VII Photo Agency and selected by the international jury of the 57th annual World Press Photo Contest as the World Press Photo of the Year 2013. The picture shows African migrants on the shore of Djibouti city at night, raising their phones in an attempt to capture an inexpensive signal from neighbouring Somalia – a tenuous link to relatives abroad. Djibouti is a common stop-off point for migrants in transit from such countries as Somalia, Ethiopia and Eritrea, seeking a better life in Europe and the Middle East. The picture also won 1st Prize in the Contemporary Issues category, and was shot for National Geographic.

AFP/Amsterdam

A moonlit image of migrants trying to get mobile phone signals on a Djibouti beach has won the World Press Photo of the Year award for US photographer John Stanmeyer.

A 19-member jury awarded the prize for the photograph of African migrants holding phones up to the sky to capture a signal so they can call home, as they make their way to a hoped-for better life in Europe.

The awards, including two top prizes for AFP, were announced at a press conference in Amsterdam, where World Press Photo is based.

“It’s a photo that is connected to so many other stories – it opens up discussions about technology, globalisation, migration, poverty, desperation, alienation, humanity,” said jury member Jillian Edelstein.

Fellow jury member Susan Linfield said: “So many pictures of migrants show them as bedraggled and pathetic ... but this photo is not so much romantic, as dignified.”

Stanmeyer told AFP that he felt “honoured” by the prize.

“This photo is poetic, it connects to all of us,” he told AFP by telephone. “It’s just people trying to call loved ones. It could be you, it could be me, it could be any one of us.”

The US-based VII agency photographer, who took his prize-winning shot for the National Geographic, focuses on “social injustices, eradication of global poverty, human rights”, according to his website.

The World Press Photo jury of photography professionals, presided over by VII Agency founder photographer Gary Knight, spent the last two weeks judging photos in Amsterdam.

AFP photographers won two prizes, including the coveted 1st Prize Spot News Single for Philippe Lopez’s painterly image of typhoon Haiyan survivors carrying religious icons in a procession in the Philippines.

The photograph, with a devastated landscape as its backdrop, had already been chosen by Time magazine as one of the top 10 images of 2013.

Asia specialist Lopez joined AFP’s Phnom Penh bureau in 2000 and is currently a staff photographer at the agency’s Asia-Pacific headquarters in Hong Kong.

“This photograph sums up the faith of a people who continue to move forward despite the scale of the disaster,” Lopez said. “I am delighted that the jury chose this image of hope.”

AFP’s Lyon-based photographer Jeff Pachoud’s elegant shot of a dog-sledding race through pristine snow, taken from a helicopter, won 1st Prize Sports Feature Singles.

“I remember this special moment when everything was just perfect for capturing this surrealist setting,” Pachoud said.

Almost 100,000 images were submitted by 5,754 photographers from 132 countries and judged anonymously, organisers said.

Stanmeyer will be awarded a prize of 10,000 euros ($14,000) and a camera during a ceremony in Amsterdam in April.

 

 

 

February 14, 2014 | 09:47 PM