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World Press Photo Of 2010 Depicts Disfigured Afghan Woman

TOBY STERLING   02/11/11 11:03 AM ET   AP

AMSTERDAM — A South African photographer's portrait of an Afghan woman whose husband sliced off her nose and ears in a case of Taliban-administered justice won the World Press Photo award for 2010, one of the industry's most coveted prizes.

Jodi Bieber's posed picture, which contrasts the woman's arresting beauty with the violence done to her after she fled an abusive marriage, was published on the cover of Time magazine on Aug. 1.

Bieber, 44, a winner of eight previous World Press Photo awards since 1998, is a freelance photojournalist affiliated with the Institute for Artist Management/Goodman Gallery. She has published two books on her native South Africa.

Jury members said the photo, though shocking, was chosen because it addresses violence against women with a dignified image. The woman, 18-year-old Bibi Aisha, was rescued by the U.S. military and now lives in America.

"This could become one of those pictures – and we have maybe just 10 in our lifetime – where if somebody says 'you know, that picture of a girl' – you know exactly which one they're talking about," said jury chairman David Burnett of Contact Press.

The picture also evokes the iconic 1984 National Geographic photograph of a beautiful young Afghan woman with a piercing gaze.

Time's publication of the picture provoked international debate over the ethics of publishing – or not publishing – such a disturbing image.

"It's a terrific picture, a different picture, a frightening picture," said Juror Vince Aletti, an American freelance critic. "It's so much about not just this particular woman, but the state of women in the world."

In a video commentary on Time's website, Bieber said, "It was more about capturing something about her – and that was the difficult part." She said she did not want to portray Aisha as a victim. "I thought, no, this woman is beautiful."

Aisha posed for the Time cover photo because she wanted readers to see the potential consequences of a Taliban resurgence, the magazine said when it was published.

Although established photo agencies and press bureaus won a fair share of honors for 2010, a trend toward freelancers and unaffiliated photographers continued to grow.

"Any photographer anywhere with a laptop and a camera is competing with every other photographer in the world," Burnett said. "A lot of the best work is done by photographers who went out and did it on their own. They didn't wait to be sent."

In addition, in a world mobile phones have cameras, he said it's inevitable that amateur photographers will be the only ones to record some events.

In acknowledgment of that, the jury gave special mention to a 12-picture series made by the miners trapped for 69 days some 700 meters (766 yards) underground in Chile's San Jose mine before they were rescued on Oct. 13.

"The whole point of a photo is that somebody had to see it and be there," Burnett said.

Getty Images and Panos each won in five categories, while Reuters had three and The Associated Press and Agence France-Presse each had two.

Daniel Morel won first place in the Spot News Stories category for his series on the Jan. 12 earthquake and its immediate aftermath. He also took second place in the Spot News Singles category for an image of a woman trapped under rubble being rescued.

Morel is also involved in a legal dispute over the republication of his photos by news outlets after he put them on a website. Someone else spotted them, claimed ownership, and they were used by AFP.

AP photographer Altaf Qadri won first prize in the People in the News category for a shot of mourners at the funeral of Feroz Ahmad, who was killed in September when Indian police opened fired on pro-independence demonstrators in Indian-administered Kashmir.

AP's Vincent Yu of Hong Kong took third place in the same category for a photo of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il and his son Kim Jong Un together in Pyongyang, North Korea, on Oct. 10.

In all, 56 photographers of 23 nationalities won prizes. They competed among a record pool of 108,059 photos by 5,847 photographers participating from 125 countries.

Bieber, the overall winner, also won first place in the portraits category for the same photo. She will receive a cash prize ofeuro10,000 ($13,500) in a ceremony later this year.

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AMSTERDAM — A South African photographer's portrait of an Afghan woman whose husband sliced off her nose and ears in a case of Taliban-administered justice won the World Press Photo award for 20...
AMSTERDAM — A South African photographer's portrait of an Afghan woman whose husband sliced off her nose and ears in a case of Taliban-administered justice won the World Press Photo award for 20...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kansasbashkir
"Take the time that it takes..."
02:54 PM on 02/15/2011
How this photo was used is the issue here. This is propaganda. What a shame this young woman was exploited like this yet one more time...first by her so-called husband, then by the photographer and again by TIME.
I would say this photo depicts our overall state in the world. The "little" people are being used by the corporations and the wealthy attached to them to gain more power and wealth. In the process they/we are being maimed.
I hope she is able to find the help she needs and is able to begin a new phase of her life where she is supported and loved for being who she is.
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Wisdo
semantics shamantics
04:32 AM on 02/17/2011
I wouldnt say the photographer "exploited" her. Truth will out and this woman's disfigurement IS a case where the public needs to know. I agree it was used by time as part of a disinformation campaign to support war. Thats how these things work, unfortunately.
12:19 AM on 02/14/2011
I dont care how great the picture from an artistic point of view. This is war propaganda from Time, the leader in propaganda since WWII. It's not war either, its interlocking industry money. If they could get more money thru peace, we'd have peace.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freenation
04:11 PM on 02/13/2011
So a picture printed by Time magazine supporting war is a winner...who were the jury? neocons
11:17 AM on 02/13/2011
Wasn't this story revealed to be false propaganda? And that the Taliban had not actually done this as was reported in the american media.

I suppose the picture itself is a good one, but how it came to be was a disgrace. And certainly is not in line with receiving a journalism award
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Red45
We can turn the tide
12:32 AM on 02/17/2011
To me, it's a picture of grace and beauty despite the horrors she went through. I don't know about the disputed facts.
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01:42 AM on 02/13/2011
The picture is the true face of islam.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freenation
04:08 PM on 02/13/2011
the pictures from gaza are the true face of judaism...how is that? bigot
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wisdo
semantics shamantics
04:33 AM on 02/17/2011
and the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings are the true face of Chritianity?
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Farsha
12:23 AM on 02/13/2011
Irony is the western forces have killed 2 children daily on a basis for a whole decade.

Not counting women and other civil killed, tortured and rap edand village leveled to ground by the forces.

And then they use misery of girls like this as propaganda
11:53 PM on 02/12/2011
How come you win more awards for taking shocking photos that depict violence and cruelty instead of nice photos that depict tranquility and beauty?
01:31 PM on 02/13/2011
especially when they lied about the cause of the violence
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DejzaVoo
11:52 PM on 02/11/2011
Also, Aisha apparently has a younger sister who was a slave in the same household. She wants to get her out of there as she fears the younger girl is probably being abused even worse than before because of Aisha's escape.

I have no idea how to help her, but the full story and a before/after picture of Aisha can be found here: http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/7026672-the-young-afghan-aisha-bibi-regains-profile

Anyone have any information on how to help the younger sister?
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greg abbott
Anti-Apartheid and Pro-Democracy
07:06 PM on 02/11/2011
This photo strikes me as convenient American agitprop for justifying 'The Reason America cannot Leave Afghanistan and Stop Killing it's Civilians' - notice the title adjoining the picture 'What Happens if we Leave Afghanistan'

Shall we count up the 100,000's of thousand of civilians 'Amerikuh' has caused to be killed horribly in Iraq, Afghanistan, or Gaza?

Hypocrites!

Baloney - phooey on your war and phooey on your propaganda
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
trinity
08:12 PM on 02/11/2011
I agree we need to pull out of Afghanistan...but we should take all the women and girls with us and leave the Taliban to their ways...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DejzaVoo
11:55 PM on 02/11/2011
I am not for war in anywhere, but whether we are at war or not with nations, the people of the US take an interest in helping people when they are being treated in ways that we can't comprehend. Do not lump the citizens of the US in with our Government's agendas.

You can disagree with our government's actions and you will likely find a large portion of our people that also disagree, but do not think that just because we are citizens of this country, we are the same.
01:38 PM on 02/13/2011
You may have missed it but this story was revealed to be largely falsified as a justification for continued war with the Taliban.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/12/07/bibi-aisha-nose-removal-n_n_793296.html

Its a disgrace that it is getting a journalism award
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argent1
Drawing lions in the sand
06:59 PM on 02/11/2011
Photos of similar wives and daughters have been around a long time - I am very sure they circulated around the White House in early 2001.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lynda Filler
Telling it the way I see it.
05:41 PM on 02/11/2011
We forget most times how much freedom we have in our democratic countries. A stunning memorable image. It takes tremendous courage to allow this photo to be taken; and amazing skill and emotional depth to depict this young woman's beauty amidst the horror of what has happened to her.
05:06 PM on 02/11/2011
It's photos like this, that make me so glad I removed all traces of god, religion an all of the horrid reasoning that goes with it.
03:59 AM on 02/12/2011
The people who rescued her were religious also. It's possible that the people who reconstructed her face and have helped her with recovery here in the US may also be religious. I'm not too religious myself, but I find it silly to blame violence against women, a tragedy that affects women in almost every corner of the world, on religion.
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Versh
05:04 PM on 02/11/2011
What if we stay? This happened while we were there. It happens all over the world whether we're present or not. It happens here!

Either way, it's an amazing photo, whatever the caption reads.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KDog76A
Radical Centrist
05:15 PM on 02/11/2011
"It happens here!"

Really? there's government enforced dismemberment occuring in the US?
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french queen13
my beloved is mine and I am his
06:25 AM on 02/12/2011
I don't think Aisha's mutilation had anything to do with government - her husband did it because she fled.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Havana Thinks
Live and Let Live!
07:43 AM on 02/12/2011
Many nationalities defect or willingly come to US for education, economic and freedom issues to name a few. Surely, you are aware they do not forget or leave their culture @ the airport. Their beliefs continue. Yes, there have been honor killings in the US and the communities have often supported the fathers and mothers who caused the deaths of their family members. Research "honor" killings. So very sad to come to the US for a better life but end up killed because you wanted to partake in the freedom offered here. May they all affect growth and knowledge that change has to come.
05:03 PM on 02/11/2011
Now, if I took a picture of the victims of the drone bombings (you know there are plenty of them) and a headline "What happens when America comes to Afghanistan" I would surely be labeled a terrorist propagandist.

BTW, why did Huffpo censor my previous post which was essentially the same?
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04:57 PM on 02/11/2011
This picture speaks more than words about hardline extremist Muslims.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KDog76A
Radical Centrist
05:16 PM on 02/11/2011
The libs will say its not PC to call them that.
03:50 AM on 02/12/2011
Nah! I have no trouble with you calling me lib.