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08/01/07
AP teams covering Gaza and Lebanon
conflicts among winners of AP staff awards
NEW YORK (AP) -- Teams of AP journalists who at great personal
risk provided coverage of two Middle East conflicts -- the
Hamas takeover of Gaza and last year's war between Hezbollah
and Israel -- have been honored by the Associated Press Managing
Editors.
The APME deadline reporting award for 2006-07 was won by the
team, led by reporters Diaa Hadid and Sarah El Deeb, that
described in vivid detail Hamas' bloody takeover of the coastal
strip from Fatah in June.
"The staff delivered very compelling stories under extreme
conditions," said the judges, members of the APME board.
"Turning out that type of writing on deadline, while
surrounded by gunfire, was amazing ... This entry shows why
newspapers depend on the AP for fast, accurate reporting from
around the globe."
Others cited in the entry were APTN cameraman Rashid Rasheed,
reporter Karin Laub, photographers Hatem Moussa and Khalil
Hamra and driver Mamdouh Al-Masri.
Coverage of the Middle East also was central to the news photography
award, which went to a team of photographers covering the
intense monthlong Israeli-Hezbollah war last summer. The package
included work by Kevork Djansezian, Mohammed Zaatari, Pier
Paolo Cito, Kevin Frayer, Baz Ratner, David Guttenfelder,
Lefteris Pitarakis, Oded Balilty, Sebastian Scheiner, Matt
Dunham and Hussein Malla.
"Each image was beautiful in a situation where there
wasn't much beauty," the photo judges said. "Collectively,
the AP photographers were courageous in their storytelling
process to bring the images back to places were people don't
live in fear."
Guttenfelder also received the award for feature photography
for his visual documentation of the effects of Agent Orange
on children in Vietnam more than 30 years after the end of
that conflict.
"Guttenfelder's poignant images are moving because they
show children with various forms of physical and mental disabilities
in everyday situations," the judges said.
APME, an association of editors at 1,500 AP member newspapers
in the U.S. and the Canadian Press in Canada, recognizes journalism
excellence among the news cooperative's staff with awards
in eight categories. The entries were judged Saturday in New
York ahead of a meeting of the association's board of directors.
In other awards announced Wednesday:
-- Ryan Lenz, correspondent in Evansville, Ind., received
the enterprise reporting award for breaking, while on assignment
in Iraq, the story of the rape and murder of an Iraqi girl
and her family.
-- Rukmini Callimachi won the feature writing award for a
story that personalized the quest to identify unidentified
Hurricane Katrina victims in New Orleans.
-- Laura Wides-Munoz of the Miami bureau received the Charles
Rowe Award for Distinguished State Reporting, for coverage
of Hispanic affairs.
-- Fresno Correspondent Garance Burke won the John L. Dougherty
Award, given to a staffer with less than three years of experience
with the cooperative and five years total.
The first award for best use of multimedia was given to the
team of Dave Clark, Francois Duckett and Jonathan Warren,
all from the online department, and reporters Scott Lindlaw
and Martha Mendoza for their interactive reconstruction online
of the 2004 friendly fire death of Army Ranger and former
football star Pat Tillman in Afghanistan.
"We came away impressed with the level of sophistication
that the AP has developed to multimedia story-telling,"
said Steve Sidlo, editor and publisher of the Springfield
(Ohio) News-Sun, who chaired the judging in that category.
The awards will be presented during APME's annual conference,
which runs from Oct. 3-6 in Washington.
The judges also awarded the following honorable mentions:
-- Deadline reporting: Mark Scolforo, Marc Levy, Adam Geller,
Deborah Hastings, for coverage of the Amish school shootings
in Lancaster County, Pa.
-- Enterprise: AP Correspondent Alfred de Montesquieu for
coverage of Darfur; Washington reporter Hope Yen for reporting
on bonuses paid to bureaucrats at the troubled Veterans Affairs
Department.
-- Charles Rowe award: New Orleans newsman Cain Burdeau for
uncovering problems with pumps installed in the Crescent City
in the wake of Katrina; Missouri staffers David Lieb, Alan
Zagier and Marcus Kabel for coverage of a nursing home fire;
John O'Connor of Springfield, Ill., for his stories revealing
Illinois government corruption.
-- John L. Dougherty award: Ryan Foley, Madison, Wis.
-- Best use of multimedia: the online team of Warren, Clark,
Duckett and Sean McDade for an interactive about the new clues
that continue to turn up 70 years after the disappearance
of Amelia Earhart.
-- Feature writing: Allen Breed, a national writer based in
Raleigh, N.C., and Binaj Gurubacharya, correspondent in Nepal,
for a piece on the death-defying and danger-denial culture
of Mount Everest climbers.
-- News photography: Team coverage of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict (Emilio Morenatti, Oded Balilty, Sebastian Scheiner,
Majdi Mohammed, Kevin Frayer, Ariel Schalit, Hatem Moussa,
Khalil Hamra, Tsafrir Abayov, Nasser Ishtayeh, Mohammed Ballas,
Adel Hana, Nasser Shiyoukhi, Eyad Albaba, Alvaro Barrientos,
Lefteris Pitarakis, Muhammed Muheisen); also, Pavel Rahman
in Bangladesh, for a photo of two brothers in a landslide.
-- Feature photography: Inaldo Perez, based in Cali, Colombia,
for a photo of a woman hugging a lion, and Rodrigo Abd in
Guatemala, for coverage of the practice in that country of
requiring families to pay dues to maintain grave sites at
cemeteries.
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On the Net:
http://www.apme.com
http://ap.org
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