Awards
Robin Hammond:
The FotoEvidence Award

Chuck shares his small but well protected makeshift home, high up in the walls of the tunnel, with his companion Lisa. © 2012 Andrea Star Reese

Country and Snow White. © 2010 Andrea Star Reese

Chuck waits for his companion. © 2010 Andrea Star Reese

An elderly woman carrying grocery bags crosses a street next to a long black cloth used to separate the area from Syrian government forces' sniper fire, in the Bab el-Adid district in Aleppo. ©Fabio Bucciarelli / Agence France-Presse

A wounded Syrian youth sits on the back of a truck carrying victims and wounded people to hospital following an attack by regime forces in the northern city of Aleppo. ©Fabio Bucciarelli / Agence France-Presse

A Free Syrian Army prepares to shoot an Rpg against President Assad's forces position in the Old City district of Aleppo. ©Fabio Bucciarelli

Abandoned by their governments, forgotten by the aid community, neglected and abused by entire societies: A voiceless minority resigned to the dark forgotten corners of churches, chained to rusted hospital beds, living out their lives behind the bars of filthy prisons - Lives condemned to quiet misery… These are the mentally disabled living in Africa’s regions in crisis. Severely mentally disabled men and women are shackled and locked away in Juba Central Prison for years on end. The new nation of South Sudan faces a tremendous challenge to build a modern country capable of caring for all of its citizens. Juba, Sudan. January 2011. © Robin Hammond/Panos

Many Somalis will take their mentally ill relative to traditional or Khoranic healers for treatment. Mogadishu, Somalia. May 2011. © Robin Hammond/Panos

This 14 year old boy has been tied up for six years. His mother refuses to have him admitted to Gulu Hospital which is only two kilometers away. Gulu, Northern Uganda. April 2011. © Robin Hammond/Panos

Guatemalan nationals are loaded onto an airplane named Molly at a municipal airport in Brownsville, Texas. The flight flew directly to La Aurora Airport in Guatemala City where the men and women were returned to their homeland. Thousands of Mexican and Central American migrants are returned to their home countries each year by the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement or ICE. The agency operates about 48 flights each week to deport people from the United States back to their country of origin. Depending on the crime the migrants commit will determine whether or not they will be shackled throughout the flight. The flights originate from various parts of the United States. Approximately 400,000 people were deported this past year. © Jon Lowenstein / NOOR

Migrants slip into the Rio Grande on their way to the United States. This group made it through without being detained. Pedro Mendoza, lower right corner, lives in Reynosa and has worked as a low-level coyote. I connected with him through a man I met in Chicago at Juan Diego Democratic Worker Center. We went down to the border and met up with Pedro. Pedro had passed more than 20 people at one time and sometimes had to save people who were drowning in the river or the canals that the migrants must pass over in that stretch of the border. Before he would connect me with the migrants we sat down in his room and talked until dawn one night. He posed very challenging questions about my role in the experience. “What will you do when two people fall in and are drowning? Will you just take pictures or will you jump in and help me to save these people.” When he crossed people he received $100 per person. In 2003, when I crossed he was going over to the other side to work in construction in Edinburgh, Texas. During the past decade, millions of Mexican and Central American migrants have left their homes and families, faced death on the journey to the United States and lived under the specter of criminality once in this country. Despite these obstacles, these resilient immigrants are transforming American culture and posing fundamental questions of justice, citizenship, and labor to the country. © Jon Lowenstein

Training the Special Response Team of the Border Patrol. The SRT or Special Response TEam is a relatively new wing of the United States Border Patrol designed to be a more militaristic, SWAT style operational group that can enforce border policy. During the past decade, millions of Mexican and Central American migrants have left their homes and families, faced death on the journey to the United States and lived under the specter of criminality once in this country. Despite these obstacles, these resilient immigrants are transforming American culture and posing fundamental questions of justice, citizenship, and labor to the country. © Jon Lowenstein / NOOR

Pakistan, Karachi, july 2010: The dead body of a 20 years old man assassinated in an open marked by an unknown gunman. His mother and the rest of the family is gathering around him out of the Abbasi Hospital mortuary in order to carry him at home for the funerals. © Massimo Berruti/AgenceVU

Pakistan, NWFP, Mardan disrict, Malakan Road, June 2009: displaced children waiting for a food distribution made by a local NGO. These people was not accepted in the official camps. They live without any governmental assistance © Massimo Berruti/ Agence VU

Rawalpindi, October 2008: Dust storm in the countryside just out the Rawalpindi District. © Massimo Berruti/ Agence VU
Chuck shares his small but well protected makeshift home, high up in the walls of the tunnel, with his companion Lisa. © 2012 Andrea Star Reese
The 2013 FotoEvidence Book Award jury included award winning photographer Maggie Steber, the director of Visa Pour L'Image Jean-Francois Leroy, British Journal of Photography photo editor Olivier Laurent, TIME International desk photo editor Patrick Witty and Svetlana Bachevanova, publisher at FotoEvidence.
FotoEvidence announces that New Zealand photojournalist Robin Hammond has been granted the 2013 FotoEvidence Book Award. Finalists are : Andrea Reese, Jon Lowenstein, Massimo Berruti and Fabio Bucciarell. The annual award recognizes a photographer whose work demonstrates courage and commitment in the pursuit of social justice. FotoEvidence will publish Condemned, a body of work shot over 2 years in 7 countries that documents the mistreatment of the mentally ill in Africa.
The 2013 FotoEvidence Book Award brought projects from Africa, Asia, Europe and the Americas, documenting assaults on human dignity from around the world. There is no shortage of people living under conditions of great injustice but the work submitted for the 2013 FotoEvidence Book Award shows that dedicated photographers everywhere are working to bring this to light and inspire change. We are proud to publish and disseminate the selected projects, which we feel demonstrate the courage and commitment of documentary photographers in pursuit of social justice.
The treatment of the mentally ill in Africa; the problem of homelessness in the United States; dysfunction, corruption and poverty in Pakistan; massive Central American immigration through Mexico to the United States and back; and the Syrian civil war: challenges to justice that may seem intractable. Still, as 2013 FotoEvidence jury member Maggie Steber has said, "Photographers are driven to cover these issues because they never go away. The challenge before us...is to make people stop and think and realize that very fact: these issues do not go away. But photographers are eternal optimists... we just don't give up. Photographers may not be heroes but we can make heroic images and a heroic effort to make the world a better place."
An exhibit of all the projects will be mounted in New York at the VII Photo Agency Gallery in October of 2013.
Condemned exposes the systematic violation of the human rights of the mentally ill in African nations, in the aftermath of conflict and crisis. Confined, abused and forgotten by most of society, the mentally ill can be found in prisons or in chains at holy sites or hospitals.
Shot in 7 countries, the black and white photographs of "Condemned" capture the bleak conditions in which the mentally ill live and take the viewer painfully close to the intimate suffering of the mentally ill. It gives voice to a voiceless group of people, who have had their complaints of abuse and calls for freedom dismissed as the rants of mad people.
With "Condemned" Hammond intends to alert the world to the extreme injustice of the treatment of the mentally ill in these societies, so ignorance will no longer be able to be uses as an excuse for inaction."
Robin Hammond:
The winner of the 2013 FotoEvidence Book award is a 37-year-old freelance photojournalist born in New Zealand. He has been part of the photo agency Panos Pictures since 2007.
The winner of four Amnesty International awards for Human Rights journalism, Robin has dedicated his career to documenting human rights and development issues around the world, especially in sub-Saharan Africa.
In 2011, Hammond won the Carmignac Gestion Photojournalism Award which allowed him to document in Zimbabwe for four months. Actes Sud published a book of the photos to coincide with an exhibition of the work in Paris in November 2012.
His long term project on mental health, Condemned, was exhibited in September 2012 at the photojournalism festival Visa Pour l'Image.
After spending time in Japan, the United Kingdom and South Africa, Robin Hammond currently lives in Paris. He contributes to many international newspapers and magazines including National Geographic, Time Magazine, Newsweek, The Sunday Times Magazine, The New York Times, and Polka. He also works regularly with various non-governmental organizations.
Links
http://www.FotoEvidence.com
http://www.robinhammond.co.uk
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