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Mahmud Hams Wins Visa d'Or News Award Share This on LinkedIn   Tweet This   Forward This

9 September 2024

Agence France-Presse photojournalist Mahmud Hams has been awarded the Visa d'Or News prize for his coverage of the conflict in Gaza. Hams, a Palestinian who has worked for AFP for over two decades, has documented the war ignited by Hamas's attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

"I spent my childhood in Gaza and in 23 years of photojournalism, I have witnessed every war, every conflict there. But this war is unlike any other, without precedent from the very first day," said Hams. "My colleagues and I have had to face incredibly difficult conditions, with no red lines and no protections for anyone. There were even attacks targeting journalists' offices, which are supposed to be off-limits in times of war.

"Yet, despite the ever-present danger, I continued to cover the conflict because it is my duty, the one I chose when I embraced the profession of journalism."

Hams, aged 44, holds a degree in Journalism and Information from the Islamic University of Gaza. He joined AFP in 2003 and has since covered daily news in the Gaza Strip. He has also reported from Libya and Egypt. Hams left Rafah in February with his family and has since been working for AFP in Qatar.

Palestinian AFP Photographer Mahmud Hams Wins Visa d'Or News Award

Palestinian AFP photojournalist Mahmud Hams has been awarded the Visa d'Or News prize for his coverage of the conflict in Gaza. The prize, one of_ the most prestigious in the field of photojournalism, is supported by the Visa pour l'Image Association -- Perpignan_.

Amidst the bombings, with death ever-present and the constant fear of being targeted, Mahmud Hams, who has worked for AFP for over two decades in the Palestinian territories, has relentlessly continued to document the war ignited by Hamas's attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

"I spent my childhood in Gaza and in 23 years of photojournalism, I have witnessed every war, every conflict there. But this war is unlike any other, without precedent from the very first day," said Hams. "My colleagues and I have had to face incredibly difficult conditions, with no red lines and no protections for anyone. There were even attacks targeting journalists' offices, which are supposed to be off-limits in times of war."

He explained, "Many journalists have been killed; others wounded. I've also lost friends and loved ones. We struggled to keep our families safe. Yet, despite the ever-present danger, I continued to cover the conflict because it is my duty, the one I chose when I embraced the profession of journalism.

"I stayed calm, for my family and to carry out my mission until the very last moment," said Hams, who left Gaza with his family in February. "I hope the photos we take show the world that this war and the suffering must end," he added.

Mahmud and his colleagues, photographers and journalists from AFP in the Gaza Strip, have carried out extraordinary work in every respect, considering the conditions in which they lived with their families and loved ones," remarked Éric Baradat, AFP's Deputy News Director for Photo, Graphics, Data and Archives. "It is staggering and often unimaginable. Their testimony will be recorded in history."

After Oct. 7, AFP relied on its Gaza bureau, staffed by nine journalists, to cover the war from within the besieged Palestinian territory. On Nov. 2, the office building, which had been evacuated a few days earlier, was badly damaged by a strike, probably caused by Israeli tank fire, according to an investigation conducted by AFP and several international media outlets.

Having remained in Gaza for several months with no way to leave, all AFP staff and their families have since been evacuated. The Agency continues to report on the war through other Palestinian journalists, working closely with its Jerusalem office, which has been leading the coverage since the beginning of the conflict.

Photojournalist Mahmud Hams, aged 44, holds a degree in Journalism and Information from the Islamic University of Gaza. He joined AFP in 2003 and has since covered daily news in the Gaza Strip. He has also reported from Libya and Egypt. Mahmud Hams left Rafah in February with his family and has since been working for AFP in Qatar.


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