3—Gumda, Nepal. Saturday, May 09, 2015: Nepalese villagers look on as they watch a helicopter picking up a medical team, dropping aid at the edge of a makeshift landing zone on May 9, 2015 in the village of Gumda, Nepal. On the 25th of April, just before noon local time, as farmers were out in fields and people at home or work, a devastating earthquake struck Nepal, killing over 8,000 people and injuring more than 21,000 according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Homes, buildings and temples in Kathmandu were destroyed in the 7.8 magnitude quake, which left over 2.8 million people homeless, but it was the mountainous districts away from the capital that were the hardest hit. Villagers pulled the bodies of their loved ones from the rubble by hand and the wails of grieving families echoed through the mountains, as mothers were left to bury their own children. Over the following weeks and months, villagers picked through ruins desperate to recover whatever personal possessions they could find and salvage any building materials that could be reused. Despite relief teams arriving from all over the world in the days after the quake hit, thousands of residents living in remote hillside villages were left to fend for themselves, as rescuers struggled to reach all those affected. Multiple aftershocks, widespread damage and fear kept tourists away from the country known for its searing Himalayan peaks, damaging a vital climbing and trekking industry and compounding the recovery effort in the face of a disaster from which the people of Nepal continue to battle to recover.
La mostra internazionale World Press Photo 2016 ha aperto i battenti ieri, venerdì 30 settembre, a Bari presso lo Spazio Murat e rimarrà aperta fino al 23 ottobre.
La Mostra, giunta alla 61ª edizione, è il concorso di fotogiornalismo più prestigioso al mondo, che vede annualmente la partecipazione di circa 6.000 fotoreporter delle maggiori testate editoriali internazionali come National Geographic, BBC, CNN, Le Monde, El Pais.
150 le immagini in mostra, selezionate come vincitrici del concorso fotografico tra oltre 100.000 scatti da una giuria internazionale presieduta da Francis Kohn, direttore fotografico dell’agenzia France Presse.
La Regione ha sostenuto l’iniziativa dell’associazione CIME (Culture e Identità Mediterranee), di Vito Cramarossa e Francesco Muciaccia.
World Press Photo rappresenta l’eccellenza della fotografia d’attualità con la foto vincitrice dell’anno World Press Photo of the Year e le diverse categorie: natura e ambiente, vita quotidiana, mutamenti climatici e sociali, ritrattistica e reportage di guerra.
Foto di Daniel Berehulak