129 Objekte
(HO) 409125691
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 DANIELE VOLPE - IXIL GENOCIDE 088
Forensic anthropologists exhibit the clothes and personal objects they found in the graves with the hope that them could be reconize by the relatives and to bury the remains with a name. Although was not possible have a match of genetic profile after the DNA alalysis, there still the hope to have a sure identification in the future...In the early eighties, the Ixil Community was one of the principal targets of a genocide operation, involving systematic rape, forced displacements and hunger during the Guatemalan civil war. According to a 1999 United Nations truth commission, between 70 and 90% of Ixil villages were razed and 60% of the population in the highland region were forced to flee to the mountains. By 1996, it was estimated that some 7,000 Maya Ixil had been killed. The violence was particularly heightened during the period 1979–1985 as successive Guatemalan administrations and the military pursued an indiscriminate scorched-earth...Non-fiction and non-posed picture. I took it while I followed the labor of forensic anthropologists. (Daniele Volpe) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409125716
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 ALAIN SCHROEDER - FINAL FAREWELL 094
Aceh Province, Sumatra, Indonesia..Half an hour after her death, the team is still profoundly shocked. The truck pulls over and vet Zulhilmi wraps the tiny orangutan in a green surgical drape...The 1-month-old baby orangutan was rescued from a palm oil plantation with her mother, named Hope by the rescue team. Hope, secured in a cage in the back of the pick up, was found with a broken clavicle, 74 air rifle bullet wounds and totally blind...General caption.Indonesia's Sumatran orangutan is under threat from the ongoing depletion of the rainforest. As palm oil plantations, logging, mining, hunting continue to proliferate, orangutans are being forced out of their natural rainforest habitat. ..Organizations rescue orangutans in difficulty (lost, injured, captive...) with the goal to reintroduce them into the wild and to create genetically viable populations in protected forests...Today, with 14,000 specimens left, the Sumatran orangutan is listed as critically endangered. (Alain Schroeder) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409125821
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 ALAIN SCHROEDER - SAVING ORANGUTANS 101
Sibolangit, SOCP Quarantine Centre, North Sumatra, Indonesia. ..Substitution mothers are on the way to the forest school with orphaned orangutans where they will teach them to climb trees. Like humans, the mother orangutan has to teach her kids everything they need to know to survive on their own. At the SOCP center, human caregivers take on that maternal role. It is the first step in a teaching, socialization and rehabilitation program with the goal of release at the age of 7 to 8 years old. This corresponds with the age when orangutans naturally leave their parents in the wild...from left to right in the front ; .- orangutan FIONA, with keeper SELVI.- orangutan BINTANG,.- orangutan SIBRING, with keeper YANTI.- orangutan IPIN with keeper MEUTYA (Vet).in the back ;.- orangutan BINAWANA, with keeper YENNY (Vet)..General caption:.Indonesia's Sumatran orangutan is under severe threat from the incessant and ongoing depletion and fragmentation of the rainforest. As palm oil and rubber plantations, logging, road construction, mining, hunting and other development continue to proliferate, orangutans are being forced out of their natural rainforest habitat. ..Organizations like the OIC (Orangutan Information Centre) and their immediate response team HOCRU (Human Orangutan Conflict Response Unit), rescue orangutans in difficulty (lost, injured, captive...) while the SOCP (Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme) cares for, rehabilitates and resocializes orangutans at their purpose-built medical facility, aiming to reintroduce them into the wild and to create new self-sustaining, genetically viable populations in protected forests...That we share 97% of our DNA with orangutans seems obvious when you observe their human-like behavior. Today, with just over 14,000 specimens left, the Sumatran orangutan (Pongo Abelii) along with the 800 specimens of the recently discovered Tapanuli species (Pongo tapanuliensis), are listed as critically endangered by the International. (Alain Schroeder, for National Geographic) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409125816
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 ALAIN SCHROEDER - SAVING ORANGUTANS 100
Sibolangit, SOCP Quarantine Centre, North Sumatra, Indonesia. ..Brenda, an estimated 3-month-old female orangutan (she has no teeth yet), was confiscated from a villager in Blang Pidie on the west coast of Aceh. Her left arm humerus was completely snapped in two. Yenny, the SOCP's vet, is standing next to Brenda's X-ray that reveals the broken bone...The 3-hour operation was led by Dr. Andreas Messikommer, a renowned orthopedic surgeon invited from Switzerland whose more usual patients are people in and around Lausanne and Montreux....General caption:.Indonesia's Sumatran orangutan is under severe threat from the incessant and ongoing depletion and fragmentation of the rainforest. As palm oil and rubber plantations, logging, road construction, mining, hunting and other development continue to proliferate, orangutans are being forced out of their natural rainforest habitat. ..Organizations like the OIC (Orangutan Information Centre) and their immediate response team HOCRU (Human Orangutan Conflict Response Unit), rescue orangutans in difficulty (lost, injured, captive...) while the SOCP (Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme) cares for, rehabilitates and resocializes orangutans at their purpose-built medical facility, aiming to reintroduce them into the wild and to create new self-sustaining, genetically viable populations in protected forests...That we share 97% of our DNA with orangutans seems obvious when you observe their human-like behavior. Today, with just over 14,000 specimens left, the Sumatran orangutan (Pongo Abelii) along with the 800 specimens of the recently discovered Tapanuli species (Pongo tapanuliensis), are listed as critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). (Alain Schroeder, for National Geographic) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409125746
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 ALAIN SCHROEDER - SAVING ORANGUTANS 102
Indonesia, Sumatra, Aceh province, Jantho Reintroduction Centre located in the Jantho Pine Forest Nature Reserve...At dawn, veterinarian Pandu crosses the Krueng Aceh river in a small boat carrying Diana, an 8-year-old female orangutan, for a final release. But this is not Diana's first attempt. In 2014, she was released unsuccessfully having to return several times to the SOCP Quarantine Centre in Sibolangit for a variety of ailments. Having been domesticated, Diana had difficulty adjusting to forest food and on her last visit to the clinic, they discovered she had malaria (an extremely dangerous illness for an orangutan) that required a blood transfusion. Since, she has been on a strict diet of leaves but it remains to be seen if she will successfully adapt to the jungle this time...Diana has developed a particular bond with Pandu over the years and is so comfortable with the vet that she just climbs on his back for the ride across the river...The goal of the Jantho Reintroduction Centre is to establish a new, wild and sustainable Sumatran orangutan population within the Jantho Pine Forest Nature Reserve. Since 2011, over 100 orangutans have been released back into their natural habitat and several new births have been recorded...General caption:.Indonesia's Sumatran orangutan is under severe threat from the incessant and ongoing depletion and fragmentation of the rainforest. As palm oil and rubber plantations, logging, road construction, mining, hunting and other development continue to proliferate, orangutans are being forced out of their natural rainforest habitat. ..Organizations like the OIC (Orangutan Information Centre) and their immediate response team HOCRU (Human Orangutan Conflict Response Unit), rescue orangutans in difficulty (lost, injured, captive...) while the SOCP (Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme) cares for, rehabilitates and resocializes orangutans at their purpose-built medical facility, aiming to reintroduce them into the wild. (Alain Schroeder, for National Geographic) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409125731
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 ALAIN SCHROEDER - SAVING ORANGUTANS 099
Sibolangit, SOCP Quarantine Centre, North Sumatra, Indonesia. ..Fahzren is undergoing a routine medical check..Junior vet Miuthya (r) and senior vet Yenny (l) left examine the orangutan...Fahzren is 30 years old and comes from a zoo in Malaysia where he has lived since he was a baby. His medical condition is fine but he does not have the skills to survive in the wild. ...General caption:.Indonesia's Sumatran orangutan is under severe threat from the incessant and ongoing depletion and fragmentation of the rainforest. As palm oil and rubber plantations, logging, road construction, mining, hunting and other development continue to proliferate, orangutans are being forced out of their natural rainforest habitat. ..Organizations like the OIC (Orangutan Information Centre) and their immediate response team HOCRU (Human Orangutan Conflict Response Unit), rescue orangutans in difficulty (lost, injured, captive...) while the SOCP (Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme) cares for, rehabilitates and resocializes orangutans at their purpose-built medical facility, aiming to reintroduce them into the wild and to create new self-sustaining, genetically viable populations in protected forests...That we share 97% of our DNA with orangutans seems obvious when you observe their human-like behavior. Today, with just over 14,000 specimens left, the Sumatran orangutan (Pongo Abelii) along with the 800 specimens of the recently discovered Tapanuli species (Pongo tapanuliensis), are listed as critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). (Alain Schroeder, for National Geographic) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409125855
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 BRENT STIRTON - PANGOLINS IN CRISIS 105
DUONGLAM, VIETNAM: Do Doan Quat, 71, a 6th generation traditional medicine doctor, is seen with his wife Tran Thi Thanh in their home. They are grinding two different kinds of pangolin scales and mixing them with other herbs to create a medicine supposedly good for tumors. Quat confided that he has never been convinced of the efficacy of Pangolin scales but that his clients believe in them so he uses them. He states that a lot of this kind of medicine is a testament to the power of belief. He adds that the use of pangolin parts in Vietnam was so common in the past that it was like using chickens. He says the use has declined and is not so common anymore, the recent ban has moved the trade more underground and there are very few local pangolin left. He states that much of Vietnam's traditional medicine is imported from China. The Vietnamese tend to prioritize traditional medicine but, in an emergency, will go for Western Medicine first. (Brent Stirton, Getty Images, for National Geographic) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409125831
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 BRENT STIRTON - PANGOLINS IN CRISIS 103
YAONDE, CAMEROON: A man tries to stop the photographer from photographing four juvenile pangolins for sale in an illegal bushmeat market in Yaonde, Cameroon. There are another five endangered species on this table. Although they are officially listed as critically endangered, pangolins are still heavily traded on the bushmeat market in Cameroon, one of the only countries in the world where there are still enough pangolins for hunters to find. Law enforcement is very lax on this issue and corruption in the courts means a bribe is all it takes to get away with this trade. Pangolin scales, highly prized in Asia for traditional medicine, are nowadays kept after consumption and Cameroonian middlemen purchase those for Chinese clients who often fly them out of the country via corrupt officials and eco guards. Bushmeat purveyors say this is a recent phenomenon within the last five years that offers them another source of income. (Brent Stirton, Getty Images, for National Geographic) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409125826
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 BRENT STIRTON - PANGOLINS IN CRISIS 104
COTE D'IVOIRE: Members of the newly formed Ivorian Unit for Trans-National crime are seen with a recent confiscation of 3,600kgs of Pangolin scales in the car park of their offices. The investigative NGO Eagle worked in co-operation with this new unit to capture an Ivorian Trafficker and his 3 accomplices with over 3 tons of pangolin scales. They recently also arrested a Vietnamese trafficker who was caught with 23 ivory tusks from rare Forest Elephant as well as 600 kgs of Pangolin scales. Together this seizure represents a conservative estimate of over 11,000 pangolins. The Ivorian trafficker received one year of jail time and was out again as of the 1st of August, the Vietnamese man is still inside, his phone was full of illegal wildlife trade items. He says he is only in Ivory coast for this trade. Abidjan has a substantial Vietnamese and Chinese population. The house where he was arrested also contained weapons and drugs belonging to a Chinese man, he was also implicated in human trafficking of Ivorian women to China. (Brent Stirton, Getty Images, for National Geographic) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409126006
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 ALON SKUY - MUSA’S STRUGGLE AND SEARCH FOR THE STAGE 109
Professional dancer, Musa Motha , A South African performer who dances on crutches, poses for a picture in Newtown, Johannesburg..."23-year-old Musa Motha uses gravity to perfect his technique and his work is getting him noticed abroad. ". .Motha's leg was amputated when he was 11-years-old after being diagnosed with cancer..."He had dreams of being a professional soccer player but quickly realised that he wouldn't be able to pursue this dream...He joined the Vuyani Dance Theatre last year and found his passion."..The company was involved with the University of KwaZulu Natal Drama and Performance Department Pietermaritzburg when they hosted internationally renowned dancer, choreographer, teacher, director and scriptwriter Gregory Maqoma at this year's Dance Experia Festival. The festival included a masterclasses which was open to the public and ended with a solo performance of Ketima by Maqoma, followed by Rise by Vuyani Dance Theatre choreographers. (Alon Skuy, Sunday Times) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409125985
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 ADAM FERGUSON - THE HAUNTED 110
[Note: full captions will be added on 3 March] Rezan at Khanke IDP Camp, Dohuk Province, Iraqi Kurdistan on April 20, 2019. Rezan is 11. He was kidnapped by ISIS in 2014 and freed earlier this year. How does the human soul survive atrocity? After the horror of ISIS captivity, tens of thousands of Iraqis âÄ” many of them children âÄ” are caught up in a mental-health crisis unlike any in the world. Adam Ferguson photographed posed portraits of displaced Yazidi, a Kurdish religious minority group of some 700,000 people, most of whom lived west of Mosul in a district called Sinjar. He also photographed displaced ArabâÄ™s suffering from conflict associated trauma. He took these photographs at camps for displaced people in the Iraqi Kurdistan and in Nineveh Province, Iraq. There are 16 camps scattered around Duhok, a province smaller than Connecticut. At its peak, Duhok was home to nearly half a million people displaced by ISIS. Many have yet to return home. One camp in Mamasharn has a âÄœpsychosocial center,âĝ where graduate students are training to treat men and women who have survived atrocity. Earlier this year, Jan Kizilhan, a prominent Kurdish psychologist from Germany who oversees the program, was meeting with Midya, an 8-year-old Yazidi girl who used to faint some 20 times a day. Kizilhan said he frequently received calls from doctors in Canada and Europe wondering what to do about fainting among Yazidis, especially among the women who had been raped. âÄœThe women are always having dissociations,âĝ he told me. âÄœUsually because of a trigger, a smell, or they might see something in the paper. To avoid the rape in their minds, they might faint and fall down. They live with a feeling of unreality and detachment from the world. A Trauma can devastate and reorganize autobiographical memory, making it hard for victims to feel safe in the present moment. ( Adam Ferguson, for The New York Times Magazine) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409126035
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 ADAM FERGUSON - THE HAUNTED 112
[Note: full captions will be added on 3 March] Honar, age 8, in Sharia Village, Dohuk Province, Iraqi Kurdistan on April 20, 2019. Honer is 8. He was kidnapped in 2014, and his mother and father are missing. He says he was taught to use weapons and he saw ISIS fighters execute people. He also says he was beaten regularly by his captives. How does the human soul survive atrocity? After the horror of ISIS captivity, tens of thousands of Iraqis âÄ” many of them children âÄ” are caught up in a mental-health crisis unlike any in the world. Adam Ferguson photographed posed portraits of displaced Yazidi, a Kurdish religious minority group of some 700,000 people, most of whom lived west of Mosul in a district called Sinjar. He also photographed displaced ArabâÄ™s suffering from conflict associated trauma. He took these photographs at camps for displaced people in the Iraqi Kurdistan and in Nineveh Province, Iraq. There are 16 camps scattered around Duhok, a province smaller than Connecticut. At its peak, Duhok was home to nearly half a million people displaced by ISIS. Many have yet to return home. One camp in Mamasharn has a âÄœpsychosocial center,âĝ where graduate students are training to treat men and women who have survived atrocity. Earlier this year, Jan Kizilhan, a prominent Kurdish psychologist from Germany who oversees the program, was meeting with Midya, an 8-year-old Yazidi girl who used to faint some 20 times a day. Kizilhan said he frequently received calls from doctors in Canada and Europe wondering what to do about fainting among Yazidis, especially among the women who had been raped. âÄœThe women are always having dissociations,âĝ he told me. âÄœUsually because of a trigger, a smell, or they might see something in the paper. To avoid the rape in their minds, they might faint and fall down. They live with a feeling of unreality and detachment from the world. Trauma can devastate and reorganize autobiographical memory, making it hard for victims to feel safe in the present moment ( Adam Ferguson, for The New York Times Magazine) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409126020
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 ADAM FERGUSON - THE HAUNTED 113
[Note: full captions will be added on 3 March] Noora Ali Abbas, age 60 and her grandson Harreth, age 6 at their tent in Salamiyah IDP Camp 2, Nineveh Province, Iraq on April 22, 2019. A case worker at the camp identified Noora as suffering from depression because of her trauma. Noora explained to me she has severe anxiety. Noora and and Mardhiya, claim their son and husband, Marwan Ismael Ilyas, was taken by ISIS in 2015. Harreth is stateless and unable to get an Iraqi government ID because the authorities believe the father was ISIS. Noora follows her grandson to school and can't stop watching him because she said her sons last words were “please take care of my son”. How does the human soul survive atrocity? After the horror of ISIS captivity, tens of thousands of Iraqis — many of them children — are caught up in a mental-health crisis unlike any in the world. Adam Ferguson photographed posed portraits of displaced Yazidi, a Kurdish religious minority group of some 700,000 people, most of whom lived west of Mosul in a district called Sinjar. He also photographed displaced Arab's suffering from conflict associated trauma. He took these photographs at camps for displaced people in the Iraqi Kurdistan and in Nineveh Province, Iraq. There are 16 camps scattered around Duhok, a province smaller than Connecticut. At its peak, Duhok was home to nearly half a million people displaced by ISIS. Many have yet to return home. One camp in Mamasharn has a “psychosocial center,” where graduate students are training to treat men and women who have survived atrocity. Earlier this year, Jan Kizilhan, a prominent Kurdish psychologist from Germany who oversees the program, was meeting with Midya, an 8-year-old Yazidi girl who used to faint some 20 times a day. Kizilhan said he frequently received calls from doctors in Canada and Europe wondering what to do about fainting among Yazidis, especially among the women who had been raped. “The women are always having dissociations,” he told me. ( Adam Ferguson, for The New York Times Magazine) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409125996
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 ADAM FERGUSON - THE HAUNTED 111
[Note: full captions will be added on 3 March] Jiten, in Khanke Village, Dohuk Province, Iraqi Kurdistan on April 20, 2019. Jitan is 14. He was kidnapped in 2014 and now speaks Arabic much better than his native Kurdish. Several members of his family are still missing. How does the human soul survive atrocity? After the horror of ISIS captivity, tens of thousands of Iraqis — many of them children — are caught up in a mental-health crisis unlike any in the world. Adam Ferguson photographed posed portraits of displaced Yazidi, a Kurdish religious minority group of some 700,000 people, most of whom lived west of Mosul in a district called Sinjar. He also photographed displaced Arab's suffering from conflict associated trauma. He took these photographs at camps for displaced people in the Iraqi Kurdistan and in Nineveh Province, Iraq. There are 16 camps scattered around Duhok, a province smaller than Connecticut. At its peak, Duhok was home to nearly half a million people displaced by ISIS. Many have yet to return home. One camp in Mamasharn has a “psychosocial center,” where graduate students are training to treat men and women who have survived atrocity. Earlier this year, Jan Kizilhan, a prominent Kurdish psychologist from Germany who oversees the program, was meeting with Midya, an 8-year-old Yazidi girl who used to faint some 20 times a day. Kizilhan said he frequently received calls from doctors in Canada and Europe wondering what to do about fainting among Yazidis, especially among the women who had been raped. “The women are always having dissociations,” he told me. “Usually because of a trigger, a smell, or they might see something in the paper. To avoid the rape in their minds, they might faint and fall down. They live with a feeling of unreality and detachment from the world.” Trauma can devastate and reorganize autobiographical memory, making it hard for victims to feel safe in the present moment. ( Adam Ferguson, for The New York Times Magazine) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409126111
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 TATSIANA TKACHOVA - BETWEEN RIGHT AND SHAME 118
[Note: full captions will be added on 3 March] Natalia (name changed), 62 years old, married, one child, 1 abortion.I got pregnant for the first time in April 1986, around the time of explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. If it was not the first pregnancy of a woman, the gynecologist advised not to have a baby. .I was 31 and this was my first pregnancy. So the doctor told me to take a hoilday immediately and leave the Chernobyl area for some time - no one knew what the consequences after the explosion could be. Throughout the pregnancy, I was praying that my baby would be fine. I did not calm down until I gave birth and saw that everything was fine with the baby. .I didn't dare to have more children. The fear of the consequenses was the main reason why I had an abortion the second time. The other reason was the fear that I would not cope with two small children. It was painful and scary. (Tatsiana Tkachova) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409126126
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 TATSIANA TKACHOVA - BETWEEN RIGHT AND SHAME 121
[Note: full captions will be added on 3 March] Diana (name changed), 91 years old, single, no children, one abortion.After the war, in 1945, I was afraid of everything. My leg was amputated when I was still very young. I had to use crutches for a long time, then I got a prosthetic leg and it became easier to walk. .When I was 20 years old, I got pregnant. Ivan and I were not a couple. We just met from time to time. When I told him I was pregnant, he looked at me in silence and left. His mother was against me having a baby. She said that they did not need a child from a crippled daughter-in-law, that I had to have an abortion. .I was upset. I had an abortion. I thought that without a leg I was a cripple, and nobody needed me like that. I never again let anyone close, I decided that I would stay alone. All my life I worked as a seamstress in a small town in the north of Belarus. .I do not regret having an abortion - I didn't want to raise the child on my own. (Tatsiana Tkachova) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409126121
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 TATSIANA TKACHOVA - BETWEEN RIGHT AND SHAME 119
[Note: full captions will be added on 3 March] Alexandra (name changed) is sitting in her grandmother's apartment. Here she spent her childhood. Now in this apartment she advises clients. Alexandra is a psychologist. The photo was taken 2018-05-05 in the city of Minsk, Republic of Belarus. Alexandra is 35 years old (1983 year of birth). She is divorced. She has a child. Alexandra made two abortions. I asked Alexander to sit in a chair opposite the cabinet. As a child, Alexandra looked into the reflections of this wardrobe and made up fairy-tale heroes;.."The first time I became pregnant at the age of 23 from a man who was much older than me. I had been living alone in another country. He was my boss, who forced me to sexual relations. He did not use either condoms or other means of protecting himsef. For him, jazzing with his sperm into a woman was a thrill. I felt relieved when I had an abortion. I remember how he joked uglly and nasty that we could have a blue-eyed baby. The second story is related to my ex-husband. I was already a more mature woman. When I got pregnant, my husband and I already had a child, whom I had given birth before because of the fear to remain the infertile women. My third pregnancy I decided not to save. I understood that I no longer want a child from this man. At the time I was the breastfeeding mother and I could not have a medical abortion. It was necessary to wait for the deadline to make a vacuum. There was a terrible period: I was growing the unborn child inside with intention to kill it later." (Tatsiana Tkachova) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409126116
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 TATSIANA TKACHOVA - BETWEEN RIGHT AND SHAME 120
[Note: full captions will be added on 3 March] Tamara (name changed), 42 years old, married, 1 child, 1 abortion .I am a doctor. When I was at the end of my sixth year at university, I had an affair with a foreigner. There could be no continuation - in the 90s it was a shame to date someone from another country, he was from Morocco. .Before the summer break I found out I was pregnant. I imagined coming to my small town, where everything is exposed - I feared my parents most, especially how my father would react. The fear of condemnation and guilt haunted me. It is obvious that it was possible to go through, but at that moment I was too childish to fight for something. .I decided to have an abortion. My mom gave me money. I was in doubt. I had an abortion on the 12th week. This is already quite a late term. For me it was murder. ..After the summer holidays, when everyone came back to study, I met this guy. I told him everything. It turned out that he had a girlfriend before me who also had an abortion. For him it was a release or something. He bought me a gift. ..If my mom had supported me, maybe I would've have had the baby. (Tatsiana Tkachova) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409126166
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 OLIVIER PAPEGNIES - THE GOUANDE GAZELLES 130
Belasse Tchari got up every morning of his life to work in his field, feed his 7 children and buy enough money to wash their uniforms. In the remote village of Gouande, she has done everything she can so that Virginie and her two sisters can go to secondary school like their brothers. A goal that she had to achieve alone since her husband did not want to hear about it. .She is also among the first mothers to have encouraged her daughter in her desire to play football, a project supported by Plan International Benin. "Many people have asked me how I could let her play when it's a boys' sport, but I never wanted to stop Virginie from doing something for her own development. How can I not be happy today? My daughter takes care of her health, develops a lot of knowledge and has friends all over Benin. Benin, Atacora, Gouande,. Benin, Atacora, Gouande, 21 February 2019..In two years, the footballers from the village of Gouande, in northern Benin, have made their mark and blazed new trails. Refusing to be confined to the status of women who are fragile, incompetent or solely dedicated to motherhood, they have come together to defend their place on all the fields. (Olivier Papegnies) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
(HO) 409126226
WORLD PRESS PHOTO 2020 DAI KUROKAWA - NAIROBI DUSITD2 HOTEL ATTACK 139
Women are evacuated out of the scene as security officers search for attackers during an attack on DusitD2 hotel in Nairobi, Kenya, 15 January 2019. A large explosion and sustained gunfire sent workers fleeing for their lives at an upscale hotel and office complex in the Kenyan capital of Nairobi. 21 people have been killed in an attack by Somalia's Islamist militant group al-Shabab who said it was 'a response to US President Donald Trump's decision to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel'. The photo is an illustration of one of many tragic events that have taken place as results of US President Donald Trump's action, and how it can impact ordinary people who played no role in forming US foreign policy. I think the photo shows the contrast well- the horror experienced by fleeing women, the danger they are exposed, and bravery shown by men, the soldiers and the protection they have, the walls. I was one of the first journalists to arrive at the scene. The first thing I saw was cars on fire, allegedly exploded by attackers. There was no one but a few journalists, Kenyan police officers, and one western solider, who later the media identified as a British SAS member. The SAS man went in and out of the building bringing people out to safety in midst of gunshots and explosions. At one point, a Kenyan officer and the SAS man brought out a bloody, badly injured lifeless man from the building and dropped him in front of us like a sack, before going back into the building in an attempt to save more people. They didn't say anything to us but there was no one except few of us journalists so we dropped our cameras and carried him to the first entrace of the compound. Police officers did not bother us as long as we were helping with the situation. As we continued to move around with officers searching for attackers, an officer started telling us to leave the scene. (Dai Kurokawa, European Pressphoto Agency EPA) NO SALES, THIS MATERIAL IS FOR SINGLE USE PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT OR FOR A TEMPORARY ONLINE PUBLICATION, AND MAY BE USED EXCLUSIVELY TO PUBLICIZE THE 2020 WORLD PRESS CONTEST AND EXHIBITION. IT MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED AS PART OF AN ARTICLE OR ANY OTHER ITEM THAT CONTAINS NO DIRECT LINK TO WORLD PRESS PHOTO AND ITS ACTIVITIES. THE PICTURE MAY NOT BE CROPPED OR MANIPULATED IN ANY WAY. KEYSTONE PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS PUBLICLY DISTRIBUTED HANDOUT PHOTO. THE COPYRIGHT IS OWNED BY A THIRD PARTY.
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