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See 26 Captivating Images From the World Press Photo Contest
See 26 Captivating Images From the World Press Photo Contest
In stark black-and-white and stunning color, this year’s winning photographs capture global events on a human scale
LaBrea Letson, 8, sells lemonade made with bottled water outside her grandmother’s home near the derailment site. A van passing by tests the air for hazardous chemicals.
Rebecca Kiger, Center for Contemporary Documentation, TIME
A total of 3,778 photojournalists and documentary photographers from 141 countries submitted 59,320 photographs for consideration in this year’s World Press Photo Contest.
They covered the year’s biggest stories—including the war in Gaza, migration and climate change—as well as the ordinary lives playing out beneath and beyond the headlines.
“The world is not the same as it was in 1955 when World Press Photo was founded,” Joumana El Zein Khoury, the executive director of World Press Photo, an Amsterdam-based nonprofit, says in a statement.
“We live in a time when it is easier than ever to look away, to scroll past, to disengage,” she adds. “But these images do not let us do that. They cut through the noise, forcing us to acknowledge what is unfolding, even when it is uncomfortable, even when it makes us question the world we live in—and our own role within it.”
On March 27, World Press Photo announced 42 regional winners selected by juries from six regions: Africa; Asia-Pacific and Oceania; Europe; North and Central America; South America; and West, Central and South Asia.
From this pool of submissions, judges selected one global winner and two other finalists, which were revealed on April 17.
The photos that follow include all three global finalists, as well as a selection of regional winners.
World Press Photo of the Year: Mahmoud Ajjour, Aged 9
Mahmoud Ajjour, 9, who was injured during an Israeli attack on Gaza City in March 2024, finds refuge and medical help in Qatar.
Samar Abu Elouf, for the New York Times
As Mahmoud Ajjour’s family fled an Israeli attack on Gaza City in March 2024, the 9-year-old turned around to urge others along. An explosion tore through both of his arms.
Ajjour and his family fled to Qatar, where he received medical treatment. Although he’s begun to settle into a new life, Ajjour requires special assistance for most daily activities. He dreams of getting prosthetics.
“One of the most difficult things Mahmoud’s mother explained to me was how when Mahmoud first came to the realization that his arms were amputated, the first sentence he said to her was, ‘How will I be able to hug you?’” Samar Abu Elouf, the photojournalist who took the photo for the New York Times in June 2024, recalled in a statement.
Like Ajjour, Abu Elouf is also from Gaza. She was evacuated in December 2023 and now lives in the same apartment complex as Ajjour in Doha, Qatar.
Children have suffered greatly during the Israel-Hamas war. U.N. agencies say that more than 13,000 have been killed, while an estimated 25,000 have been injured, as the Associated Press’ Edith M. Lederer reported in January.
“This young boy’s life deserves to be understood, and this picture does what great photojournalism can do: provide a layered entry point into a complex story, and the incentive to prolong one’s encounter with that story,” says Lucy Conticello, chair of the global jury, in a statement. “In my opinion, this image by Samar Abu Elouf was a clear winner from the start.”
World Press Photo of the Year Finalist: Night Crossing
Chinese migrants warm themselves during a cold rain after crossing the U.S.-Mexico border.
John Moore, Getty Images
In Night Crossing, photojournalist John Moore captures a group of Chinese migrants warming themselves around a fire in Campo, California, after crossing the United States-Mexico border.
In recent years, American officials have seen an increase in undocumented Chinese migration. Driven by financial hardship, political suppression and religious persecution, roughly 38,200 unauthorized Chinese migrants were apprehended by U.S. Customs and Border Protection at the southern border in 2024—up from roughly 2,200 in 2022, according to World Press Photo.
But even if successful, crossing the border is only the beginning of the struggle.
“In the United States now, certainly among the immigrant community and specifically the undocumented immigrant community, there is a real sense of fear because people don’t know what’s going to happen one day to the next,” Moore says in a statement.
World Press Photo of the Year Finalist: Droughts in the Amazon
A young man brings food to his mother, who lives in the village of Manacapuru. The village was once accessible by boat, but because of the drought, he must walk more than a mile along the dry riverbed of the Solimões River to reach her.
Musuk Nolte, Panos Pictures, Bertha Foundation
To bring food to his mother, the young man in Musuk Nolte’s photograph used to take a boat across the Solimões River in Brazil. But severe droughts have caused water levels in the Amazon to drop to historically low levels. Now he must trek over a mile across the dry riverbed.
Setting a human figure against a stark backdrop, Nolte spotlights the way climate change threatens both nature and civilization.
“Photographing this crisis made the global interconnectedness of ecosystems more evident,” Nolte explains. “Sometimes we think that these events do not affect us, but in the medium and long term they have an impact.”
Regional Winner: Africa, Singles
A groom poses for a portrait at his wedding. In Sudan, marking a wedding with celebratory gunfire is a tradition.
Mosab Abushama
Since 2023, Sudan has been ravaged by civil war. It has claimed roughly 150,000 lives, and 12 million people have fled their homes.
Mosab Abushama’s photograph, titled Life Won’t Stop, features a young groom posing for a mobile phone portrait, a gun in his hand and another leaning against the wall behind him.
“Despite the clashes and random shelling in the city, the wedding was a simple but joyous occasion with family and friends,” Mosab recalls.
As is traditional in Sudan, celebratory gunfire was part of the wedding. In the context of the brutal war, the groom’s arsenal contains a double meaning.
“The war in Sudan, which began in April 2023, brought horrors and displacement, forcing me to leave my childhood home and move to another part of the city. It was a time none of us ever expected to live through,” Mosab explains. “Yet, this wedding was a reminder of the joy of everyday life still possible amidst the tragedy and despair.”
Regional Winner: Asia-Pacific and Oceania, Long-Term Project
Tāme Iti, a prominent Tūhoe activist bearing a traditional facial tattoo, stands at the 2014 Tūhoe-Crown Settlement Day ceremony, where the government formally apologized for historical injustices.
Tatsiana Chypsanava, Pulitzer Center, New Zealand Geographic
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Horses roam freely in Te Urewera, serving as crucial transportation in the rugged terrain.
Tatsiana Chypsanava, Pulitzer Center, New Zealand Geographic
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Carol Teepa sits in her kitchen with her youngest grandchild, Mia, and her son, Wanea, one of more than 20 children she adopted.
Tatsiana Chypsanava, Pulitzer Center, New Zealand Geographic
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Ruiha Te Tana, 12, relaxes at her grandfather's home. Built by an ancestor in 1916, the homestead serves as a living archive of Tūhoe history.
Tatsiana Chypsanava, Pulitzer Center, New Zealand Geographic
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Mihiata Teepa, 16, and her Tūhoe Māori Rugby League U16 teammates perform a haka during practice before a game.
Tatsiana Chypsanava, Pulitzer Center, New Zealand Geographic
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Children from the Teepa family drive the younger siblings home after a swim in the river.
Tatsiana Chypsanava, Pulitzer Center, New Zealand Geographic
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Apprentices from a local school learn essential farming skills at Tataiwhetu Trust, an organic dairy farm.
Tatsiana Chypsanava, Pulitzer Center, New Zealand Geographic
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Teepa children share a watermelon. John Rangikapua Teepa and his wife, Carol, have raised more than 20 children adopted according to the Māori whāngai custom.
Tatsiana Chypsanava, Pulitzer Center, New Zealand Geographic
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The Ngāi Tūhoe people of New Zealand’s Te Urewera region are known for their fiercely independent spirit. Their homeland in the hills of the North Island isolated them from British settlers. As a result, the Tūhoe have maintained their language and cultural identity.
The photos by Tatsiana Chypsanava, a Belarusian-born photojournalist currently based in New Zealand, show a landscape and a people side by side. Men with traditional face tattoos, girls performing a haka before a rugby game and horses grazing in a pasture are all part of a complex, isolated world.
Chypsanava’s long-term photography project shows how intertwined the natural world is with the Tūhoe community. As the guiding philosophy of one Tūhoe family farm expresses, “Ka ora te whenua, ka ora te tangata” (“When the land is in good health, so too are the people”).
Regional Winner: Europe, Singles
A man from the Luhansk region lies injured in a field hospital set up in an underground winery near Bakhmut. His left leg and arm were later amputated.
Nanna Heitmann, Magnum Photos, for the New York Times
Just days before Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, the self-proclaimed separatist republics of Donetsk and Luhansk called on men to serve in Russian-backed militias.
The young man in Underground Field Hospital, Nanna Heitmann’s photograph for the New York Times, was recruited to fight for the so-called Luhansk People’s Republic’s militia just two days before the invasion.
Pictured in January 2024, the soldier is splayed out in a makeshift field hospital in a winery near the city of Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine. His left leg and arm were later amputated, and Bakhmut has been devastated by the war.
Regional Winner: North and Central America, Stories
Rick Tsai, an East Palestine resident, walks in Sulphur Run near the train derailment site wearing protective gear.
Rebecca Kiger, Center for Contemporary Documentation, TIME
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LaBrea Letson, 8, sells lemonade made with bottled water outside her grandmother’s home near the derailment site. A van passing by tests the air for hazardous chemicals.
Rebecca Kiger, Center for Contemporary Documentation, TIME
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Connie Fortner addresses National Transportation and Safety Board members after several hours of listening to the board’s investigative findings.
Rebecca Kiger, Center for Contemporary Documentation, TIME
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Phil Gurley (left) of the EPA gives a presentation on the remediation process to a biology class at East Palestine High School.
Rebecca Kiger, Center for Contemporary Documentation, TIME
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For two days after the Norfolk Southern train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, in February 2023, train cars full of hazardous materials and carcinogenic gases kept burning.
But the full extent of the environmental and human disaster lasted much longer, as chemicals leached into rivers and residents continued to advocate for protection.
In the aftermath, photojournalist Rebecca Kiger embedded with residents as they navigated new medical and political challenges. Her stark black-and-white photographs for the Center for Contemporary Documentation provide a window into their struggle.
Kiger’s photos capture both uncertainty and resilience. One photograph depicts a young girl selling lemonade. With tap water no longer safe, she made the lemonade with bottled water.
Regional Winner: South America, Singles
A stranded Boeing 727-200 surrounded by floodwaters at Salgado Filho International Airport in Brazil
Anselmo Cunha, Agence France-Presse
Anselmo Cunha’s Aircraft on Flooded Tarmac was taken in May 2024, as heavy rainfalls in the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul caused devastating flooding. The image shows a grounded airplane surrounded by floodwaters. In doing so, it hints at both the cause (air travel burning fossil fuels) and effect (floodwaters) of climate change in the very same frame.
Regional Winner: West, Central and South Asia, Long-Term Projects
A kolbar follows an arduous mountain path. Kolbars’ packs can weigh more than 100 pounds, and crossings can take up to 12 hours.
Ebrahim Alipoor
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Kolbars make the perilous climb on a border crossing route known as the “Passage of Death” because of the number of lives it claims.
Ebrahim Alipoor
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Thousands have lost their lives crossing these mountains.
Ebrahim Alipoor
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At least 2,463 kolbars were killed or injured in Iranian Kurdistan between 2011 and 2024.
Ebrahim Alipoor
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Khaled, 32, had to have both eyes removed after being shot in the head by a border guard. He has two children, who are 2 and 7.
Ebrahim Alipoor
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Some goods kolbars carry across the border are freely available in Iran, but they fuel a thriving black market in the region that avoids import duties.
Ebrahim Alipoor
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Mohammad, 22, shares a farewell with his mother before embarking on a journey to Europe to seek better opportunities.
Ebrahim Alipoor
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Many of the goods brought in by kolbars end up in luxury stores across the nation.
Ebrahim Alipoor
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In Bullets Have No Borders, Ebrahim Alipoor, a photographer from the Kurdistan province in Iran, captures a stark reality of life for many in his region.
To avoid Iranian government bans of imports like household appliances, cell phones and clothing, kolbars (border couriers) carry products strapped on their back from Iraq and Turkey and into Iran.
In Iranian Kurdistan, unemployment is widespread, leading many disenfranchised men to pursue this dangerous career. Deliveries can weigh more than 100 pounds, and journeys can take up to half a day.
But even sure-footed and sturdy kolbars are always in grave danger. Khaled, a 32-year-old kolbar, had to have both eyes removed after a border guard shot him in the head. Alipoor’s black-and-white images reveal a perilous world.
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