Pulitzer for Reuters journalist for Rangoon photograph
Mizzima News, April 8, 2008
Chiang Mai, Thailand -- The photo journalist who clicked pictures of a Japanese video cameraman being shot dead by a Burmese soldier during the Saffron Revolution has won the Pulitzer Prize.
<< Kenji Nagai of APF tries to take photographs as he lies injured after police and military officials fired upon and then charged at protesters in Yangon's city center September 27, 2007. Nagai, 50, a Japanese video journalist, was shot by soldiers as they fired to disperse the crowd. Nagai later died. REUTERS/Adrees Latif
The Pulitzer Prize board awarded Adrees Latif, a Reuters news agency photographer on Monday for his photograph of the Japanese sprawled on the pavement, after being fatally shot during the uprising by Buddhist monks and people against the Burmese military junta in September last year.
According to Reuters, Adrees Latif entered Yangon on September, 23, 2007.
"Two minutes later, the shooting started. My eye caught a person flying backwards through the air. Instinctively, I started photographing, capturing four frames of the man on his back," Reuters quoted Latif as saying.
"The entry point of the bullet is clear in the first frame, with a soldier in flip flops standing over the man and pointing a rifle. In the second frame, the man is reaching over to try and film."
The photographs of the killing taken by some local and foreign photojournalists were spread across the world media.