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Pulitzer 2015 : les photographes primés

L’édition 2015 du célèbre prix qui récompense notamment la branche journalistique vient de dévoiler les deux lauréats de la catégorie « Photographie d’actualité » et « Photographie d’article de fond« .

Photo – Daniel Berehulak : James Dorbor, 8, suspected of being infected with Ebola, is carried by medical staff to an Ebola treatment center in Monrovia. The boy, who was brought in by his father, lay outside the center for at least six hours before being seen. (Daniel Berehulak, The New York Times – Sept. 5, 2014)

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Le prestigieux prix Pulitzer couronne les photos qui ont fait l’actualité et qui, par leur pouvoir visuel et leur témoignage, soulignent des événements qui ont marqué les mémoires au cours de l’année. Pour cette édition, sont récompensés Daniel Berehulak, un journaliste freelance qui a couvert l’épidémie d’Ebola pour le journal The New York Times (avec le prix Feature Photography), ainsi que le St. Louis Post-Dispatch Photography Staff pour la couverture des événements qui se sont produits à Ferguson (prix Breaking News Photography).

Voici certains de ces clichés, les autres sont à voir sur le site du Pulitzer.

Photo – Daniel BerehulakA man with Ebola symptoms waits to be admitted outside the Doctors Without Borders treatment center in Monrovia. At the height of the epidemic, many people could not gain admission to such centers and died at home — or in front of the treatment centers. (Daniel Berehulak, The New York Times – Sept. 4, 2014)
Photo – Daniel BerehulakHealth workers pray before the start of their shift at the Bong County treatment center. (Daniel Berehulak, The New York Times – Oct. 6, 2014)
Photo – Daniel BerehulakWorkers entering the high-risk zone of the Bong County treatment center in Liberia. (Daniel Berehulak, The New York Times – Oct. 6, 2014)
Photo – Daniel BerehulakAn Ebola survivor, George Beyan, walks his 5-year-old son, William, who tested positive for Ebola, at the Bong County treatment center. Cured, George was free to go home. But the staff told him that, now immune, he would be the best person to look after his son. William died a few days later. (Daniel Berehulak, The New York Times – Oct. 19, 2014)

Photo – Daniel BerehulakEsther Doryen, 5 years old, is carried to an ambulance in Monrovia. She died a week later. (Daniel Berehulak, The New York Times – Aug. 31, 2014)

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Photo – St. Louis Post-Dispatch : Edward Crawford returns a tear gas canister fired by police who were trying to disperse protesters in Ferguson, Missouri. Four days earlier, unarmed black teenager Michael Brown was shot to death by white police officer Darren Wilson. The killing ignited riots and unrest in the St. Louis area and across the nation. (Robert Cohen, St. Louis Post-Dispatch – August 13, 2014)

Photo – St. Louis Post-Dispatch : ‘Don’t shoot us!,’ yell residents taunting police officers who were arriving to break up an angry crowd on Canfield Drive in Ferguson, hours after an officer killed Michael Brown. Rumors state that Michael Brown had his hands up when he was shot by officer Darren Wilson. The night was the genesis of the ‘Hand up, don’t shoot!’ movement that spread across the country. (David Carson, St. Louis Post-Dispatch – August 9, 2014)
Photo – St. Louis Post-Dispatch : A member of the St. Louis County Police tactical team fires tear gas into a crowd of people in response to a series of gunshots fired at police during demonstrations in Ferguson. For more than two weeks, police and protesters clashed nightly. (David Carson, St. Louis Post-Dispatch – August 18, 2014)
Photo – St. Louis Post-Dispatch : A protester shields himself from exploding tear gas canisters. On this night protesters attempted to throw Molotov cocktails, rocks and bottles at police. It was the fourth consecutive night police used tear gas to disperse the crowd. (David Carson, St. Louis Post-Dispatch – August 13, 2014)
Photo – St. Louis Post-Dispatch : Roses stretch more than 60 yards through the Canfield Green Apartments to the Michael Brown memorial as Theo Murphy and his brother Jordan Marshall light candles. (Christian Gooden, St. Louis Post-Dispatch – August 21, 2014)
Photo – St. Louis Post-Dispatch : A Missouri National Guardsman stands over the rubble of Prime Beauty Supply in Ferguson. Though Gov. Jay Nixon had activated the guardsmen several days before the grand jury’s verdict was announced, they were kept out of Ferguson until the following day. (Robert Cohen, St. Louis Post-Dispatch – November 26 2014)

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Pulitzer

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