logo
World Press Photo award withdraws invitation to award ceremony for Russian

World Press Photo award withdraws invitation to award ceremony for Russian

Yahoo12-04-2025
The World Press Photo-2025 international award has withdrawn an invitation to the award ceremony for Russian Mikhail Tereshchenko. Earlier, the photographer from the Russian state news agency TASS received the award for his photographs of anti-government protests in Georgia.
Source: World Press Photo
Details: The organisers explained their decision on the contest's website as a result of the growing "tensions on the European continent".
The organisers called it an "uncomfortable fact" that a Russian working for a Russian propaganda agency was awarded for covering the protests in Georgia.
World Press Photo also stated that the jury has limited information about the contestants when selecting entries, which is usually limited to nationality and gender. Meanwhile, the judges do not know the names of the photographers or their places of work.
Meanwhile, Mikhail Tereshchenko's work met the competition's evaluation criteria and was authentic.
The award said it would try to improve the rules and procedures for selecting participants.
Joumana El Zein Khoury, the executive director of the competition, said that World Press Photo would not cancel the award to the Russian in order not to disregard the established rules.
"We will work to improve our rules and procedures, but must always apply them fairly and without exception. Our contest has a global reach and its rules need to be applicable to very different contexts. Any change of rule to reflect one specific context will also have implications for very different ones," added Jumana El Zein Khoury, the Executive Director of the competition.
The organisers of the prize noted that they did not agree with the phrase "liberation of Mariupol", which Russian Mikhail Tereshchenko used in an interview in March 2025. They recognised that part of Ukraine's territory is occupied by the Russian Federation, including Mariupol.
"While the Russian government and TASS have disputed some of these statements, we consider them simple facts," World Press Photo added.
Background:
This year's World Press Photo jury selected two Russians and a Belarusian among the regional winners.
The Ukrainian Association of Professional Photographers (UAPF) condemned this decision and called for compliance with standards of ethics, impartiality, and transparency. The UAPF stated that awarding Russian photographers who express the position of Russian state ideology contributes to sympathy for the aggressor.
In addition, the award visually paired two works. One depicts a six-year-old Ukrainian girl ​​suffering from panic attacks after fleeing shelling. The other shows a wounded Donetsk People's Republic soldier who fought for Russia.
Following criticism, the jury publicly apologised for the decision and admitted that the combination created "an overly simplistic and false equivalence".
Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Zelenskyy's White House re-do
Zelenskyy's White House re-do

USA Today

time13 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Zelenskyy's White House re-do

Hello!Rebecca Morin Erin is forecast to steer clearof the mainland United States. I'm thinking of all those who are affected in the Caribbean, such as those in Puerto Rico. Zelenskyy back at the White House Now, it's Ukraine's turn. President Donald Trump on Monday afternoon is meeting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to discuss a potential peace deal with Russia, just days after Trump held an hourslong meeting with Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Alaska. Before the Washington meetings, Trump railed at critics of his recent summit with Putin, where he shifted his position on a Ukraine ceasefire to align with that of the Russian president. He also put the onus on Zelenskyy to end Russia's assault on his country and ruled out NATO membership for Ukraine. Follow the latest updates from Trump's meeting with Zelenskyy. Don't forget about Europe: Trump is also set to meet with European leaders, who are rallying behind Zelenskyy and hope to move Trump away from Putin's conditions for a peace deal. European leaders also participated Sunday in an emergency virtual meeting of the Coalition of the Willing, the group of countries that have offered to provide security guarantees to Ukraine after the war. See which European leaders will meet with Trump. Trump-Putin's meeting: The red carpets were rolled out. The two leaders shook hands. A roughly three-hour long meeting was had. And still, no peace deal. Trump and Putin held a roughly three hour long summit in Alaska, where the two did not come to an agreement to end the war in Ukraine. Key takeaways from the Trump-Putin summit. Documents left behind: Watch where you print. Government documents with details about meeting schedules and seating charts, as well as an extravagant menu and reminder to pronounce Putin's name "POO-tihn," were accidentally left in a hotel printer in Alaska amid Trump's meeting with the Russian leader. The documents with State Department markings, reported by NPR, were discovered in the printer in an Anchorage hotel around 9 a.m., hours before Trump's summit with Putin at a nearby military base. See what the documents said. A politics pit stop No more mail-in voting? Trump on Monday said he would sign an executive order to abolish mail-in voting, a move he said Putin supported. Mailing ballots is a popular option for voters to avoid waiting in line at polling places on Election Day. Election-security officials say voting has never been more secure and that the president has no role overseeing elections. But Trump has long railed against mail-in voting as vulnerable to fraud – despite election experts, including those in his first administration, who said mail-in voting is secure. What to know about Trump's plan. Texas standoff over Texas, we're heading home. Democrats in the Texas House of Representatives returned to Austin Monday morning after leaving the state two weeks ago in protest of a Republican plan to re-draw congressional maps to help the party gain seats in 2026. The protest temporarily blocked House Republicans from having a quorum to move the redistricting plan forward and drew national attention to Trump's effort to avoid losing the Republican majority in Congress next year. Republicans adjourned its first special session in the state House on Thursday. Democrats refused to return to the state until after that first special session. California's plans to redraw its state congressional maps also prompted Texas Democrats' return. Got a burning question, or comment, for On Politics?You can submit them here or send me an email atrdmorin@

Zelensky arrives to meet Trump backed by seven European leaders
Zelensky arrives to meet Trump backed by seven European leaders

Axios

time13 minutes ago

  • Axios

Zelensky arrives to meet Trump backed by seven European leaders

President Trump welcomed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to the White House on Monday, fresh off a summit with Vladimir Putin in Alaska. Why it matters: Trump came out of the summit with Putin declaring that it was now "up to President Zelensky" to make a deal. But Putin's maximalist claims to Ukrainian territory make the prospect of a breakthrough in the immediate future highly uncertain. Seven European leaders arrived at the White House ahead of Zelensky. After Trump and Zelensky meet, they will take part in a larger summit with those leaders — all strong supporters of Ukraine. On the agenda: Security guarantees — which Ukraine insists upon as part of any deal — and territorial concessions, which Trump believes will be necessary to achieve peace. The intrigue: Their last Oval Office meeting was disastrous, but two Trump advisers tell Axios they're not expecting a repeat. Vice President Vance, who instigated the flare-up last time, will be in the meeting. So will Secretary of State Marco Rubio and White House envoy Steve Witkoff, who were also in the meeting with Putin, as well as Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and Ukraine envoy Keith Kellogg. The White House did ask if Zelensky would be wearing a suit, after his decision not to last time irked Trump. Zelensky is wearing a black jacket but not a full business suit. The leaders of the U.K., France, Germany, Italy, Finland, NATO and the EU have already arrived at the White House. The larger meeting is scheduled to begin at 2:30pm ET. Driving the news: Zelensky made clear in his social media posts ahead of the meeting that while he and those leaders "all share a strong desire to end this war quickly and reliably," he won't cede territory to Russia. Trump doubled down on this stance in a Truth Social post just before Zelensky arrived in D.C. late Sunday that said the Ukrainian leader "can end the war with Russia almost immediately, if he wants to," adding there's no "getting back" Crimea and "NO GOING INTO NATO BY UKRAINE."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store