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Press
Releases
AP
photographer among winners of the annual Bayeux Prize for
War Correspondents
BAYEUX, France (AP)
-- Associated Press photographer Jim MacMillan, who covered
fighting between Iraqi insurgents and U.S. troops in the holy
city of Najaf, was among those honored Oct. 8 with a Bayeux
Prize for War Correspondents.
MacMillan won first
place in photojournalism, while AP photographer John Moore
took second place for his work in Iraq. Both were members
of the AP photo team in Iraq that won a Pulitzer Prize this
year.
The French journalist
Vincent Hugeux of L'Express magazine won the written press
categoryfor a report on children in Uganda, where a vicious
rebellion has devastated lives.
The radio award went
to two British Broadcasting Corp. journalists, Ishbel Matheson
and Dan McMillan, who reported on rapes in the Darfur region
of western Sudan during fighting between settled farming communities
and nomadic herding tribes competing for land and water.
The television prize
was awarded to four reporters from Britain's ITN-ITV News.
Julian Manyon, Sacha Lomakin, Artem Drabkin and Patrick O'Ryan-Roeder
reported on the September 2004 school siege in the southern
Russian town of Beslan, which ended with 331dead, many of
them children.
The contest's first
place awards include a cash prize of $9,230.
The Bayeux prizes
were first awarded in 1994 to recognize journalists who excel
in perilous conditions. Bayeux was one of the first towns
liberated from Nazi occupation in the D-Day invasion of Normandy.
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