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Chinese images win global prize | |
(about 15 hours later) | |
A Canadian photographer has won what is said to be the world's richest photographic prize, the Prix Pictet. | A Canadian photographer has won what is said to be the world's richest photographic prize, the Prix Pictet. |
Benoit Aquin travelled to northern China to record an ecological disaster which is turning 400,000 square km of once-fertile farmland into desert. | |
The Prix Pictet - sponsored by a private Swiss bank - is worth 100,000 Swiss francs (£50,000; $90,000) and aims to foster environmental awareness. | The Prix Pictet - sponsored by a private Swiss bank - is worth 100,000 Swiss francs (£50,000; $90,000) and aims to foster environmental awareness. |
It was presented in Paris by former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan. | It was presented in Paris by former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan. |
For the inaugural prize, awarded by Swiss bank Pictet et Cie, photographers were invited to submit pictures on the theme of water - though in fact the winner, Mr Aquin, took the absence of water as his subject. | For the inaugural prize, awarded by Swiss bank Pictet et Cie, photographers were invited to submit pictures on the theme of water - though in fact the winner, Mr Aquin, took the absence of water as his subject. |
His pictures show people struggling in arid streets and landscapes against the dust storms which blow almost constantly in the affected area. | His pictures show people struggling in arid streets and landscapes against the dust storms which blow almost constantly in the affected area. |
Mr Aquin's photos are on show, with those of the other 17 photographers shortlisted from among almost 250 entries, in Paris at the Palais de Tokyo. | Mr Aquin's photos are on show, with those of the other 17 photographers shortlisted from among almost 250 entries, in Paris at the Palais de Tokyo. |
Dust and desolation | Dust and desolation |
In one of Mr Aquin's photographs, two women, smartly dressed but swathed in scarves and sunglasses against the dust, stride across a street of ramshackle houses in Inner Mongolia. | In one of Mr Aquin's photographs, two women, smartly dressed but swathed in scarves and sunglasses against the dust, stride across a street of ramshackle houses in Inner Mongolia. |
Another shows a street in the town of Hongsibao in Ningxia Province, now overwhelmed by "ecological refugees" from the surrounding countryside whose livelihoods have disappeared. | Another shows a street in the town of Hongsibao in Ningxia Province, now overwhelmed by "ecological refugees" from the surrounding countryside whose livelihoods have disappeared. |
PRIX PICTET SHORTLIST Audio Slideshow: Shortlisted photos | PRIX PICTET SHORTLIST Audio Slideshow: Shortlisted photos |
A third shows a farmer standing in the cracked and dried out bed of what used to be a pond. | A third shows a farmer standing in the cracked and dried out bed of what used to be a pond. |
The crisis has been caused by over-grazing and by pumping too much water for irrigation from underground aquifers, which are now running dry. | The crisis has been caused by over-grazing and by pumping too much water for irrigation from underground aquifers, which are now running dry. |
The parched soil is blown away by the wind and creates dust storms which reach as far as Beijing, Korea, Japan and even North America. | The parched soil is blown away by the wind and creates dust storms which reach as far as Beijing, Korea, Japan and even North America. |
Mr Aquin told the BBC he has made several visits to the region, and hopes to return. | Mr Aquin told the BBC he has made several visits to the region, and hopes to return. |
The dust makes photography difficult - and in an age before digital cameras it would have made changing film well-nigh impossible. | The dust makes photography difficult - and in an age before digital cameras it would have made changing film well-nigh impossible. |
Mr Aquin says his personal favourite among his pictures is an especially desolate shot of a motorcyclist, her face invisible beneath her scarves, riding along a road lined by sand-coloured poplars and through a cloud of thick smoke from a burning truck beside the road. | Mr Aquin says his personal favourite among his pictures is an especially desolate shot of a motorcyclist, her face invisible beneath her scarves, riding along a road lined by sand-coloured poplars and through a cloud of thick smoke from a burning truck beside the road. |
The chairman of the Prix Pictet judges, Frances Hodgson, head of the photographs department at Sotheby's, said the aim of the prize was to persuade decision-makers in business, politics and non-governmental organisations to take notice and to act. | The chairman of the Prix Pictet judges, Frances Hodgson, head of the photographs department at Sotheby's, said the aim of the prize was to persuade decision-makers in business, politics and non-governmental organisations to take notice and to act. |
The exhibition will later tour to other cities around the world, starting with Dubai, where it will coincide with a meeting of the World Economic Forum. | The exhibition will later tour to other cities around the world, starting with Dubai, where it will coincide with a meeting of the World Economic Forum. |
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