Pulitzer-winning Reuters photographer Yannis Behrakis dies aged 58
Yannis Behrakis, one
of Reuters’ most decorated and respected photographers, has died after a long
battle with cancer. He was 58. Behrakis covered many
of the most tumultuous events around the world, including conflicts in
Afghanistan and Chechnya, a huge earthquake in Kashmir and the Egyptian
uprising of 2011. He narrowly survived
an attack on a convoy in Sierra Leone and led a team to a Pulitzer prize in
2016 for coverage of the refugee crisis.
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https://www.theguardian.com/media/2019/mar/03/pulitzer-prize-winning-reuters-photographer-yannis-behrakis-dies-aged-58
A message and an appeal
The Reuters US general
news editor Dina Kyriakidou Contini said “his pictures are iconic – some works
of art in their own right – but it was his empathy that made him a great
photojournalist”. “My mission is to tell
you the story and then you decide what you want to do,” Behrakis has said. “My
mission is to make sure that nobody can say: ‘I didn’t know’.”
Photograph: Yannis Behrakis/Reuters
In 2015, Behrakis and a team of photographers and cameramen worked in relay for months to cover the thousands fleeing wars in Syria, Afghanistan and beyond. It was then that Behrakis took what many consider to be one of his best pictures – of a Syrian refugee carrying and kissing his daughter as he walked down a road in the rain. “This picture proves
that there are superheroes after all,” he explained. “He doesn’t wear a red
cape, but he has a black plastic cape made out of garbage bags. For me this
represents the universal father and the unconditional love of father to
daughter.”
Behrakis was born in
Athens in 1960. In January 1989 he was sent on his first foreign assignment for
Reuters – to Muammar Gaddafi’s Libya. For the next three decades, Behrakis was
regularly on the road covering violence and upheaval across Europe, Russia, the
Middle East, Africa and Asia. In 1998, covering the
wars in the former Yugoslavia, he photographed an ethnic Albanian man lowering
the body of a two-year-old boy who had been killed in the fighting into a tiny
coffin. Behrakis took the picture from a high position and used a slow
speed/zoom technique to create a dizzying sense of movement. “The picture was very
strong and the body of the boy almost floating in the air,” he said of the
image. “It almost looked like his spirit was leaving his body for the heavens.”read / see more:
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2019/mar/03/pulitzer-prize-winning-reuters-photographer-yannis-behrakis-dies-aged-58
A message and an appeal