Suffering children: 'UNICEF Photo of the Year Award 2017'
December 21, 2017"The eyes of children always tell the truth," said the German judge and patron of UNICEF Germany, Elke Büdenbender, at the Photo of the Year Award ceremony in Berlin.
The prize is given annually to photos and reports that document the personalities and circumstances of children's suffering in an outstanding way.
Desolate childhood
This year, Zahra's gaze has become the symbol of the millions of children caught in humanitarian crises all around the world. It also reflects the battered childhood of a whole generation of Syrians.
Read more: Syrian boy inspires solidarity for besieged civilians
The moment was captured by the two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Muhammed Muheisen, who has reported from the Middle East for several years.
The Jerusalem-born photojournalist met Zahra in an improvised refugee camp in the suburbs of Mafrak, Jordan, where her parents had fled the war with her and her seven siblings in 2015.
Sad winners: Syria and Bangladesh
"Millions of boys and girls spend their often bleak childhoods in refugee camps and makeshift shelters," added Büdenbender. Zahra's photo tells vividly of the horrors she's experienced despite her young age.
"The face draws you to look at it again and again. It represents the fate of millions of children," commented Büdenbender.
Second prize in the UNICEF Photo of the Year Award 2017 went to the Bangladesh-born photographer K. M. Asad and third to the Canadian Kevin Frayer. Both documented the Rohingya crisis.
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Asad's picture shows a mother carrying her baby in the sea. Frayer caught the desperation of a boy in a refugee camp at Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh who climbs in tears onto a truck carrying relief supplies.
tla/suc/jt/rf (epd, Unicef)