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Showing posts with label Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Show all posts

Friday, 31 May 2019

A Week in Pictures, Middle East and Africa, May 31, 2019

The light in Alaa Al-Marjani’s picture is a little tough: top artificial light creating downward shadows, flat highlights and a colour cast. But this does not distract from an image that intrigues. What is best about this image is the timing, even though the light is poor and the women are covering their heads, you can just about see all the faces, with downcast eyes, and through this you get a powerful sense of devotion. Take the time to look at all their faces.

Iraq Shi’ite Muslim women place copies of the Koran on their heads during the holy month of Ramadan at the Imam Ali Shrine, in the holy city of Najaf, Iraq May 28, 2019.   REUTERS/Alaa Al-Marjani

Each week Reuters photographers are commissioned with a theme of the week. This week is ‘beauty’ next week is ‘tobacco’. They are free to shoot what they want on this theme. Hayam Adel has chosen beauty treatments and used full-on eye contact and a bold crop mixed with warm colours to shoot this striking portrait of a young woman getting her hair braided and her hand hennaed. Cropping off the top of the head and leaving the open space top-right draws you into the eye and then to the carefully braided hair. 

A Sudanese girl with braided hair poses for a picture in Cairo May 29, 2019.   REUTERS/Hayam Adel 

Sometimes a picture works well cropped in two different ways, as is the case with Ronen Zvulun’s picture of Netanyahu. The full vertical image, a classic ‘top of head’ in frame with the hand and fingers leading you through the image to the eyes, works and the quality is good. A strong single-column image, in newspaper terminology. 

Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sits at the plenum at the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, in Jerusalem May 30, 2019.   REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun

But a bold horizontal crop brings Ronen’s picture into the classic, easy to use and easy to consume digital platform format. It also brings your attention to the eyes in deep contemplation. Look carefully where each eye appears to be looking. The hand is creating wrinkles that bring you back into the image and those eyes as you are led from bottom left to top right by the fingers.   

Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sits at the plenum at the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, in Jerusalem May 30, 2019.   REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun

Ammar Awad’s picture plays a visual game of hide and seek. Your eye chases around the cool blues and greens and between the highlights and shadows looking for something to focus on. And then suddenly you see Netanyahu’s face, half obscured, peering at you from a protester’s banner. What a clever and creative way to photograph a demonstration, through a passing bus. 

A bus passes next to the residence of Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a protest against him in Jerusalem May 30, 2019.   REUTERS/Ammar Awad

Waleed Ali’s picture has immediate impact with its strong graphic composition. A solid black space is bisected by a gold panel occupying just about half the image, eye-catching even when viewed small. You then notice the sea of people moving through a bold L shape from top left to bottom right. It’s then that the single figure, wearing a white shirt, jumps out at you as he stretches to touch the holy Kaaba. And once you have spotted him you just can’t look away as he tries to resist the movement of the tsunami of people to prolong his touch. More pictures on Ramadan here.

Muslims perform Umrah around the holy Kaaba at the Great Mosque during the holy fasting month of Ramadan in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, May 26, 2019.  REUTERS/Waleed Ali

Some pictures just lift the heart, and Siphiwe Sibeko’s image does just that. Surrounded by colour, sound and movement is the biggest, warmest smile of the week. Siphiwe’s picture is perfectly timed so the waving flags don’t obscure the face. But the real secret to the success of this image is the eye contact. She’s looking right at you, even from across a crowded stadium. 

Guests sing and dance as they arrive for the inauguration of Cyril Ramaphosa as President, at Loftus Versveld stadium in Pretoria, South Africa, May 25, 2019.   REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

Just enjoy the wonderful gentle horizontal zigzag composition of Mohamad Torokman’s picture. People are spaced out against the tooth-like concrete barrier as they make their way under the solid black tones of the canopy, all set against the highlight of the blue sky. Take the time to notice how Mohamed plays with the viewer, the figures right and left are in fact shadows of people – a nice touch.    

Palestinians make their way to attend last Friday prayer of Ramadan in Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa mosque, at Qalandia checkpoint, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank May 31. 2019.   REUTERS/Mohamad Torokman

A very simple picture by Aboud Haman that is quite thought-provoking. At first sight, it’s just a couple, dwarfed by the rubble of a destroyed building, not uncommon in Raqqa. But look deep into the shadows. These people are not walking past it, they are walking through it. A potentially dangerous journey, but in the context of recent history, not as dangerous as it was before. What occurred to me is how things that are not normal in many places seem completely commonplace elsewhere.   

People walk through the rubble of damaged buildings in Raqqa Syria May 29, 2019.   REUTERS/Aboud Hamam

The name Idlib conjures up images of a city gripped with tension and destroyed by conflict. Khalid Ashawi’s picture of bread being made in a bakery is counterintuitive and gives us a certain amount of respite from what is imagined. The whole image is almost completely monochromatic, the colour bleached out and the figure silhouetted by a single light bulb on the wall. A hint of a kiss of pink on the wall and the glow of the oven warm the whole image to the extent that you can almost smell that bread. Read on about Idlib here 

A worker bakes bread inside a bakery before Iftar, or fast breaking, during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan in the city of Idlib, Syria May 28, 2019.   REUTERS/Khalil Ashawi

I really don’t do cute, but hard to resist is Amir Cohen’s lucky and affectionate image of a fruit-bat suckling. The strength of this image is that it is pin sharp with a shallow depth of field, drawing your focus to the stretched teat, the bony wing and the touch of highlight in the eye of the pup. Soft-focused and in the background, is that a slightly indignant look on the mother’s face? 


An Egyptian fruit-bat pup suckles from its mother at a laboratory in the Steinhardt Museum of natural History in Tel Aviv, Israel May 27, 2019.   REUTERS/Amir Cohen


Friday, 12 April 2019

A Week in Pictures Middle East and Africa April 12, 2019


An uncomfortable collection of colours immediately puts the mind ill at ease in Baz Ratner’s picture. Yellows, orange, greens, grays and purple, something feels instinctively not right. The people in the image are covered from head to toe in heavy protection equipment. The object of their focus, a purple coffin. We are right to feel ill at ease as these workers are carrying away another victim of Ebola. Read on here 

Workers dressed in Ebola protective suits carry a coffin with the body of a woman who has died of Ebola, as it is transported for burial from the Ebola Treatment Centre in Butembo, in the Democratic Republic of Congo March 28, 2019.  REUTERS/Baz Ratner

Tension in Sudan is high with people coming out on the streets to protest against Bashir’s government. Taking pictures is not easy for fear of arrest. A protester’s hand raised in a peace or maybe victory sign dwarfs the figures on the flyover in a slightly bizarre David Byrne of Talking Heads video distortion of scale. Each finger is the same size as the figures on the bridge, almost as if it’s reaching out to obscure them. Latest from Sudan here

Sudanese demonstrators chant slogans and wave their national flag during a protest demanding Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir to step down outside the defence ministry in Khartoum, Sudan April 8, 2019.   REUTERS


Only days later the tension is broken. Crowds carry soldiers on their shoulders after the announcement that Bashir has been removed from power by the army. The picture is crammed full of noise, heat and energy. You can’t look anywhere without seeing hands, arms, phones, flags and faces all celebrating the news. Slightly counter intuitively, I like that you can’t see the face of the soldier as this forces you to look around the whole scene. If you could see his face your eye would zoom in on that and you’d miss out on the collective relief and the noisy celebration of the crowd although of course, many on the streets are wary of the latest announcement, saying they want a civilian government.  


A military officer is carried in the crowd as demonstrators chant slogans and carry their national flags, after Sudan’s Defence Minister Awad Mohamed Ahmed Ibn Auf said that President Omar al-Bashir had been detained ‘in a safe place’ and that a military council would run the country for a two year transitional period.  REUTERS


To shoot a whole story where the faces of your subjects must not be identifiable is not easy. Essam al-Sudani has cleverly used a poster on the wall to make you feel that you are being looked back at in his picture even though the main subjects’ heads are covered in towels. When you look at the poster closely you soon realise that it too has a sense of being obscured because the face is a composition of two images. You can’t really see any faces and you feel you are trying to look at something or somebody that is hidden, a perfect way to illustrate the fight against the drugs trade in Iraq. It’s taken months to publish this story (hence the December date) but well worth the wait. You can read on here 

Iraqi suspects who were arrested for drug-related crime are seen at a police station in Basra, Iraq December 18, 2019.  REUTERS/Essam al-Sudani  

Mohammed Salem’s use of a bold portrait format to look at those who have lost limbs in Israel-Gaza border clashes during the last twelve months works in its simplicity. It’s been deliberately shot very dark. You need to fight your way into the image to seek out the details in the shadows. Only once you are there, do you notice the determined look on their faces and then the damaged and broken bodies. Read on here

A combination picture shows Palestinians who, according to medics, lost their legs after being shot by Israeli forces during protests at the Israeli-Gaza border, posing for pictures in Gaza March 13 and 16, 2019.   REUTERS/Mohammed Salem 

I am attracted to Ronen Zvulun’s picture as it looks like it is from a bygone era. A suited booted and tie-wearing politician is drumming up support from a soapbox on the election campaign. It’s more the shape of the crowd and the shop venue that give this impression. Once you begin to inspect the crowd of ‘potential voters’ most are revealed to be security staff or people armed with smart phones, bringing us sharply back to the modern age of digital political husting inside a ring of security.         

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks as he visits Mahane Yehuda Market a day ahead of the Israeli national elections, in Jerusalem April 8, 2019.   REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun 

It takes just a little time to spot the enormous tear that is rolling down Maria’s face in Zohra Bensemra’s moving picture. The solemn moment of grief slowly wells up as we study the image. The soft light on her face and the cool blues of her clothing set the sad tone. We want to know more, we need to read on, and we know her story is sad. See Zohra's full story here 

A tear falls down the face of maria Jofresse, 25, during an interview at a camp for the displaced in the aftermath of Cyclone Idai, in John Segredo, near Beira, Mozambique March 31, 2019.  Maria lost her two children to the storm.   REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra

There’s no mistaking this father’s grief as he buries his daughter in Khaled Abdullah’s picture from Yemen. Your eye is drawn immediately to the father’s face as he screams to the heavens. What you see next is his hand tightly gripping the funeral shroud. From this point you start to study the faces around this distraught man. Light is thrown up from the shroud warming the tones of the three faces immediately to the right. You don’t notice the TV camera in the shadows as your eye moves through the crowd. Eventually you end up at the figure at the top left, his arm and fingers guiding you back into the picture and to the father’s grief. There is no escape.   

A man reacts as he lowers the body of his daughter to a grave during the burial of people who were killed by a blast in Sanaa, Yemen April 10, 2019.   REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah 

A heart-warming series of pictures of twins by Afolabi Sotunde. Hard to single one out as they all quite fun but I do like the simplicity of the composition of the two boys who pose in the equally divided picture. It’s only the difference in the boy’s shorts that stops us from being fooled into thinking that this might be a mirrored image. You can enjoy the rest of the story here 

Identical twins Taiwo Ahmed and Kehinde Ahmed pose for a picture is Igbo Ora, Oyo State, Nigeria April 4, 2019. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde 

It would of course be quite fitting to use an image of bleached skulls to illustrate the 25th anniversary of the Rwanda genocide. Or maybe the torch lighting by heads of state, or  even any of the many images from the ceremony itself. But I think Baz Ratner’s simple silhouetted image of people arriving for the commemoration speaks volumes. An indeterminate number of unidentifiable people solemnly set against a blood-red sky seems a fitting tribute to the thousands who died. See more from the ceremony here  

Participants arrive to a night vigil during a commemoration ceremony marking the 25th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide, at the Amahoro stadium Kigali, Rwanda April 7, 2019.    REUTERS/Baz Ratner

There is no avoiding the emotive issue of what to do with the children of ISIS fighters once you have seen Ali Hashisho’s poignant picture of a tiny pair of feet belonging to a malnourished child in Syria. Such a simple picture, a globally recognisable image of innocence, these could be the feet of any child. The narrow depth of field throws the rest of the baby out of focus but we get the sense it is not sleeping comfortably. The picture begs the question, what next? Read on here

A child of an Islamic State fighter, who suffers from malnourishment, sleeps at a hospital in Hasaka, northeastern Syria April 6, 2019.   REUTERS/Ali Hashisho  

From his many terrific pictures of the demonstrations in Algeria I have selected one by Ramzi Boudina that answers the question: what does it look like when you are hit with a water cannon? It is not the most compositionally beautiful image and the white vehicles in the background are a bit of a distraction, but you get a real sense of being in the moment, which what great news photography is all about. More from Algeria here 

Police officers use water canon to disperse people protesting after parliament appointed upper house chairman Abdelkader Bensalah as interim president following the resignation of Abdelaziz Bouteflika in Algiers, Algeria April 9, 2019.   REUTERS/Ramzi Boudina