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Image of Crying Toddler on US Border Wins Award


FILE - A 2-year-old Honduran asylum seeker cries as her mother is searched and detained near the U.S.-Mexico border in McAllen, Texas, June 12, 2018. Getty Images photographer John Moore won the 2019 World Press Photo of the Year award for this photo.
FILE - A 2-year-old Honduran asylum seeker cries as her mother is searched and detained near the U.S.-Mexico border in McAllen, Texas, June 12, 2018. Getty Images photographer John Moore won the 2019 World Press Photo of the Year award for this photo.

The haunting image of a little girl crying helplessly as she and her mother are taken into custody by U.S. border officials won the prestigious 2018 World Press Photo of the Year Award on Thursday.

Judges said veteran Getty photographer John Moore's picture taken after Honduran mother Sandra Sanchez and her daughter, Yanela, illegally crossed the U.S.-Mexico border last year showed "a different kind of violence that is psychological."

The picture of the wailing toddler was published worldwide and caused a public outcry about Washington's controversial policy to separate thousands of migrants and their children.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials later said Yanela and her mom were not among those separated, but the public furor "resulted in President Donald Trump reversing the policy in June last year," the judges said.

Moore was taking pictures of U.S. Border Patrol agents on a moonless night in the Rio Grande Valley on June 12 last year when they came across a group of people who tried to cross the border.

Passing moment

"I could see the fear on their faces, in their eyes," Moore told U.S.-based National Public Radio in an interview shortly afterward.

As officials took their names, Moore said he spotted Sandra Sanchez and her toddler, who started wailing when her mom put her down to be searched.

"I took a knee and had very few frames of that moment before it was over," said Moore, who had been covering the U.S.-Mexico border for a decade.

At the awards ceremony in Amsterdam, Moore told AFP: "I wanted to tell a different story."

"For me it was a chance to show a view of humanity that is often only related in statistics," the 51-year-old photographer said.

"I think an issue like this, immigration issues, resonates not just in the United States, but around the world," Moore also told several hundred guests at the awards.

The sensitive issue of immigration was further highlighted at Thursday's awards.

Judges chose Dutch-Swedish photographer Pieter Ten Hoopen's images of the 2018 mass-migrant caravan to the U.S. border as its winner of the World Press Photo Story of the Year Award.

'Sense of dignity'

Ten Hoopen's pictures, which show families and children as they made their way from Honduras in mid-October to the U.S. border, "showed a high sense of dignity," one of the judges said.

Ten Hoopen thanked the migrant families, saying without them his award would not have been possible.

Trump said Tuesday that he wouldn't resume separating children of undocumented migrants, but insisted that the policy did prevent people from illegal border crossings.

His words came after he announced the departure Sunday of the official in charge of fighting illegal immigration, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen.

According to U.S. media reports, Trump's reshuffle could herald even harsher measures on the southern border.

Judges selected this year's winners from 78,801 images entered by 4,738 photographers worldwide, the Amsterdam-based organizers said.

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