Image of Russian gay couple wins World Press Photo as two awards go to Turkish photographer

Image of Russian gay couple wins World Press Photo as two awards go to Turkish photographer

THE HAGUE - Agence France-Presse
Image of Russian gay couple wins World Press Photo as two awards go to Turkish photographer

Mads Nissen won the World Press Photo of the Year 2014 contest with this image of Jon and Alex, a gay couple, during an intimate moment in St. Petersburg, Russia. REUTERS Photo

An image of a gay couple locked in a tender embrace won the prestigious World Press Photo award on Feb. 12, highlighting the plight of sexual minorities in Russia.
      
But organisers said at least a quarter of all pictures reaching the penultimate round of the 58th edition of the contest were rejected because they were digitally enhanced, the organisers said.
      
AFP's Istanbul-based photographer Bülent Kılıç won first and third prizes in the Spot News category, Singles, for two haunting images taken in Turkey and Syria.
     
Danish photographer Mads Nissen shot his evocative winning picture of "Jon and Alex" in a bare room in Saint Petersburg, with only a brown curtain as a backdrop.
      
One of the men is lying down with his eyes closed as the other looks down at him tenderly, their hands locked together.
      
Russia's gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community has come under increasing attacks in Russia, with the government earlier this year passing a controversial law banning transvestites and transsexuals from driving.
      
In 2013, President Vladimir Putin signed a law banning the so-called "propaganda" of gay relationships to minors, despite an outcry from rights groups, Western governments and celebrities including Madonna.
      
Nissen's winning shot is part of his larger project called "Homophobia in Russia" and also won first prize in the Contemporary Issues category.
      
AFP photographer Kılıç's first photo is of a young girl, wounded and dripping with water, found after clashes last year between riot police and protestors following the funeral of Berkin Elvan, a 15-year-old boy who died from his injuries sustained during the 2013 anti-government demonstrations in Turkey.

Image of Russian gay couple wins World Press Photo as two awards go to Turkish photographer
      
Kilic's second picture captures the exact moment of an air strike against Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) fighters on a Syrian hilltop in October 2014.

Image of Russian gay couple wins World Press Photo as two awards go to Turkish photographer
                      
Speaking about Nissen's winning photograph, jury chairwoman Michelle McNally said "it is a historic time for the image... the winning image needs to be aesthetic, to have impact and have the potential to become iconic".
      
"This photo is aesthetically powerful, and it has humanity," said McNally, who is The New York Times' director of photography and assistant managing editor.
       "
I am pleased that they have chosen a picture that is very calm, it's not bloody," Nissen told Copenhagen-based daily Politiken newspaper, where he works as a staff photographer.
      
"It's been a year with lots of high drama in Ukraine and with Ebola. Here it's more about a social problem than the 'bang bang'," he says.
      
Kılıç told AFP he was "very happy of course, it's the biggest photography contest of the world. It has been a dream for the last 10 years and it has finally happened."       

"You know, for years, you go on assignments, on missions. You are away for weeks, months. Sometimes you have no shower, no sleep, no food. sometimes, you risk your life."       

"It's good to know that someone recognises that, recognise the work," said Kilic.
                      
But this year's contest was marred by the rejection of a high number of photographs because they were digitally enhanced, World Press Photo's managing director Lars Boering said.
      
"Our rules clearly state that the content of the image should not be altered. This year's jury was very disappointed to discover how careless some photographers had been in post-processing their files for the contest," Boering said in a statement.
      
Photographers digitally "cleaning up" images by removing small details or sometimes excessively toning pictures "compromised the integrity of the image".
      
"Consequently, the jury rejected 20 percent of those entries that reached the penultimate round of the contest and were therefore not considered for prizes," Boering said.
      
Controversy erupted over 2012 winner Paul Hansen's winning photograph from Gaza, where he used a certain post-production technique to edit his photograph.         

This year's World Press Photo competition saw a jury of 17 professionals in the fields of photojournalism and documentary photography sift through 97,912 photographs submitted by 5,692 photographers of 131 nationalities.