| | | | Peace Image of the Year 2020 © Sasan Moayyedi | | Peace Image of the Year 2020 | | | Global Peace Photo Award 2020 | | | | | | | | | | | | | © Sasan Moayyedi | | Sasan Moayyedi wins the Global Peace Photo Award 2020 for the Peace Image of the Year. The Iranian photographer wins with a photo from his reportage Love Story about the remarkable fate of Salah Saeedpour. After a delay of almost a year because of covid, the 8th international Global Peace Photo Award competition was celebrated this evening: Alain Schroeder won with Saving Orangutans, Catalina Martin-Chico with (Re) Birth, Emeke Obanor with Heroes, Nicolas Asfouri with Hongkong Unrest, Sasan Moayyedi with Love Story. The Alfred Fried Peace Medal was presented to the five winners. The main prize, Peace Image of the Year 2020, inspired by the 1911 Austrian Nobel Peace laureate Alfred Hermann Fried and endowed with 10,000 euros, went to the Tehran-based Iranian photographer Sasan Moayyedi for his reportage on the remarkable fate of Salah Saeedpour. One day in September 2001, at a family picnic in the Iranian-Kurdish province of Marivan near the border with Iraq, Salah Saeedpour, then 15 years old, stepped on a landmine, one of many leftovers, dangerous until today, from the Iraq-Iran war of 1980-1988. The boy lost both hands and both eyes. He became a physical cripple; in the figures that measure such things, he was now 70% handicapped. But he did not give up. He trained his mutilated body, even without being able to see the world, until he won medals for swimming. And he met the love of his life, Sarveh Amini, a young Kurdish woman, whom he married in 2014. The international jury described Moayyedi's reportage Love Story as "the story of a private peace that has the power to triumph over war". | | | | | | © Anastasiya Bolshakova | | 14-year-old Anastasiya Bolshakova won the Best Peace Photo in the Children and Young People category, worth 1000 euros, sponsored by the Vienna Insurance Group. Her photo series Flight of the Soul declares her love of summer. A time when, she is convinced, “everything lives” and “nature breathes deeply”. A time when everything “is ready for beauty”. When flowers smell wonderfully. A time of idleness and bliss. In this time, especially, she wants to capture thoughts. Anastasiya photographed such moments of roaming thoughts with a self-timer. Free of any strain. Clearly in a time before, or at least far from, covid. In a peaceful childhood in a peaceful landscape. A little bit dreamy, very light, very airy. Carried by the feeling of being able to fly safely between heaven and earth. 19,711 images from 118 countries were submitted to the Global Peace Photo Award 2020. Most of the entries came from Russia, China, India, Germany and Iran. The entries were judged by a prestigious international jury of photographers, journalists and representatives of photo associations, the World Press Photo Awards, the German Youth Photo Award and UNESCO. In addition to awarding the Peace Picture of the Year to Sasan Moayyedi, Alfred Fried Peace Medals 2020 were awarded to: | | | | | | © Alain Schroeder | | Belgian photographer Alain Schroeder, for his photo report Saving Orangutans about the teams of the Orangutan Information Center, Human Orangutan Conflict Response Unit and Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme. Their mission: to make peace with nature. Peace with those creatures of the forest who share 97 percent of their genetic material with us humans. In his very touching images Alain Schroeder shows what it means to save what can still be saved. He pictures dramatic emergency actions on injured and sick animals, operations, infusions, care, mercy with the tortured creatures. He shows the gratitude and intimacy that great apes are capable of. | | | | | | © Catalina Martin-Chico | | French-Spanish photographer Catalina Martin-Chico, for her caring images of (Re)Birth, about new life after 260 000 deaths. The freedom to love after all the prohibitions. Caring instead of fighting. When, after half a century, an agreement was drawn up in Colombia between the Marxist FARC guerrilla and the government to end the killing in the forests, something like normality began from 2017 in the hideouts of the former fighters and in the 26 transformation settlements. Its special characteristic is a small baby boom. | | | | | | © Emeke Obanor | | Nigerian photographer Emeke Obanor, for his work Heroes about girls, kidnapped by the Nigerian terror group Boko Haram. They had been brainwashed. Should abandon any desire for schooling for girls. They were freed in an action of the Nigerian military. Or were able to flee when they were sent out with bomb belts on suicide missions. Now they are free at last. And back at school. Back in a place where they are allowed to learn and get smarter. Where they are allowed to read, write and operate with figures. They are back from the war and in peace. Traumatized certainly. Maybe even stigmatized. But some of them have retained the strength to hold on to their dreams. They are 16 or 17 years old. They want to become nurses or teachers. | | | | | | © Nicolas Asfouri | | Beirut-born Danish photographer Nicolas Asfouri, for his work Hongkong Unrest: It is the year 2019 in Hong Kong. According to the agreement made between China and the UK in 1997, the former British Crown Colony is already a part of China, but until 2047 it should retain a largely autonomous status: “One country, two systems”. But the ever-increasing attempts at a takeover by mainland China in this year 2019 manifest themselves, for instance, in a draft law by Hong Kong’s Chief Executive to facilitate the extradition to the Beijing regime of opponents to the system. Pupils and students take to the streets against that, young men and women. Then more and more people, a pro-democracy movement, mostly peaceful, in parts militant, ever more brutally suppressed by the police, at first with batons and tear gas, later with live ammunition. The Global Peace Photo Award is organized by Edition Lammerhuber in partnership with Photographische Gesellschaft (PHG), UNESCO, the Austrian Parliament, the Austrian Parliamentary Reporting Association, the International Press Institute (IPI), the German Youth Photography Award and the World Press Photo Foundation. The Award is inspired by Austrian pacifist and author Alfred Hermann Fried (* 11 November 1864, Vienna; † 4 May 1921, Vienna). As founder of the journal Die Waffen nieder! (Lay down your arms!) and other peace activities, Fried received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1911, jointly with Tobias Michael Carel Asser (* 28 April 1838, Amsterdam; † 29 July 1913, The Hague), organizer of the first International The Hague Peace Conference and instigator of the Permanent Court of Arbitration. More information: www.friedaward.com | | | | unsubscribe here Newsletter was sent to [email protected] © 20 Jul 2021 photo-index UG (haftungsbeschränkt) Ziegelstr. 29 . D–10117 Berlin Editor: Claudia Stein & Michael Steinke [email protected] . T +49.30.24 34 27 80 | |
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