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The 82nd Albert Londres Prize awarded to Allan Kaval of the "World"

2020-12-07T05:28:10.464Z


The 82nd Albert Londres Prize, the most prestigious award in French-speaking journalism, was awarded on Saturday 5 December to Allan Kaval, reporter for the newspaper Le Monde seriously injured in early October in Nagorno Karabakh, for a series of reports on Syria, announced the association. The 31-year-old journalist was still hospitalized in follow-up care in Paris on Saturday, two months after


The 82nd Albert Londres Prize, the most prestigious award in French-speaking journalism, was awarded on Saturday 5 December to Allan Kaval, reporter for the newspaper

Le Monde

seriously injured in early October in Nagorno Karabakh, for a series of reports on Syria, announced the association.

The 31-year-old journalist was still hospitalized in follow-up care in Paris on Saturday, two months after being the victim of a bombing in Nagorno Karabakh (or Nagorno Karabakh), a separatist enclave of Azerbaijan with a majority Armenian, at the center of a conflict murderer this fall.

It was his articles on "Syrian hell", published in October 2019, which earned this specialist in the Middle East the recognition of the jury, particularly seduced by "his portraits imbued with humanity", according to the press release from the Albert Londres association.

Directors Sylvain Louvet and Ludovic Gaillard, 38 and 40 years old respectively, have won the 36th audiovisual award for their documentary "Seven billion suspects", which highlights the dangers of mass surveillance in Nice to China via Israel, broadcast in April on Arte.

The 4th Book Prize was awarded to the 38-year-old traveling writer Cédric Gras for Stalin's Alpinists (Stock editions), the result of a two-year investigation into the fate of the Abalakov brothers, who climbed summits to glory of the USSR before being victims of Stalinist terror.

The jury for the Albert Londres Prize, made up of around twenty former winners, is chaired by Hervé Brusini, who took over from Annick Cojean this summer.

Created in 1933 in homage to the French journalist (1884-1932), father of the great modern reportage, the prize is endowed with 3000 euros for each of the laureates, who must be under 41 years old.

Source: lefigaro

All life articles on 2020-12-07

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