LOOK: Pinoy photog’s shot of QC jail prisoners wins World Press Photo prize
An arresting photograph, exposing the pitiful condition of prisoners inside a crowded jail cell in Quezon City, was among the winning images of the 60th World Press Photo Contest.
For his magnificent camera work, Noel Celis, a Manila-based Agence France-Presse (AFP) photographer, bagged third place in the “General News Category” of the annual competition.
The original photo first appeared in AFP’s feature entitled “Dead bodies and hellish prisons on the Philippine police graveyard shift” which highlighted the violence and loss of lives from President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs, locally known as “Oplan Tokhang”.
Aside from photographs of victims of extrajudicial killings (EJK) on the streets, Celis’ lenswork also captured inmates uncomfortably lying down inside what appears to be a cramped stair case.
Such cringeworthy scenes have been the norm in local jail cells, as more and more drug users and pushers have been arrested each day, while others simply surrendered in fear for their lives.
Article continues after this advertisementA photo of an EJK victim, meanwhile, won second place in the same category, showing a policeman inspecting a dead body reportedly killed by two unidentified gunmen in Manila.
Article continues after this advertisementThe photo, shot during one rainy evening, was taken by Daniel Berehulak, a Canadian photographer for the Associated Press.
Berehulak’s photo, which appeared in the photo essay “They Are Slaughtering Us Like Animals” in The New York Times, has caused much discussion in December of last year, as human rights advocates and those opposing the EJKs cited it as yet another proof of how the government’s excessively violent ways are beginning to alarm the rest of the world.
Malacañang dismissed the The New York Times photo essay as “one-sided.”
READ: Palace accuses New York Times of being ‘one-sided’
The World Press Foundation’s annual photo contest has been honoring the most powerful images caught on camera since 1955.
This year, the winning images were selected from a pool of 80,408 images made by 5,034 photographers from 125 different countries, as per The Washington Post.
The other winning images may be viewed below. JB