Syria to dominate Perpignan festival of photojournalism

August 29, 2012 by AFP

This 1982 file photo provided by Susan Essoyan shows Associated Press writer Roy Essoyan at an unknown location. The recent deaths of Essoyan, photographer Horst Faas, and correspondents Malcolm Browne, and George Esper represent the slipping away of a generation of war reporters that brought the reality of the conflict to the living rooms of America in often horrifying close-up and inspired scores of combat journalists in their wake. — AP Photo

PERPIGNAN: The conflict in Syria and its daily stream of violence will be the dominant theme of the 24th Festival of Photojournalism that opens here on Saturday.

Organisers have honoured the memory of Remi Ochlik, the French photo-journalist who was killed on assignment in Syria in February, by naming an annual prize awarded to a young journalist in his memory.

This year, the City of Perpignan Remi Ochlik award will be given to Brazil-based Spanish photographer Sebastian Liste for his work on the inhabitants of an abandoned chocolate factory in Salvador de Bahia.

This year’s prize to a female photojournalist is to be awarded to France’s Sarah Caron for a project on Pashtun women in Pakistan, which will be displayed at next year’s festival.

This year’s edition includes several retrospectives: 20 years since the start of the war in Bosnia, a history of Syria from 1920 to the present day, 50 years of Algerian independence and the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic.

AFP will have two collections on display: one by Pulitzer prize winning Afghan photographer Massoud Hossaini and one on the impact of the financial crisis on the Greek people featuring the work of Louisa Gouliamaki, Angelos Tzortzinis and Aris Messinis.

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