Guillem Valle, Photographer

Apr 11

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Aug 28

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Jul 21

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Jul 04

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Jun 21

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Feb 20

Featured on World Press Photo Official Website

Featured on World Press Photo Official Website

Aug 26

3/11 Tsunami Photo Project

Description

Photographers from around the globe converged on remote areas devastated by the Japan Earthquake-Tsunami. Among them, prestigious Leica Oskar Barnack Newcomer Award-winning Magnum nominee Dominic Nahr, this year’s Pictures of the Year International (POYi) award winner Adam Dean, World Press Photo award winner Guillem Valle and many other world-renowned photojournalists have graciously agreed to share their visions of the massive disaster and recovery efforts―along with their heartfelt spoken messages to the victims―via this online application. This app includes a total of 120 images by 14 photographers.

* Kodansha will donate all proceeds from this project to Japanese Red Cross Society.

Apr 09

Best of Photojournalism Honorable Mention

Feb 17

Mines of The Conflict

The Democratic Republic of Congo has fallen victim to rebels who use revenue from illegal mining to purchase arms and feed the conflict.
Moreover, the government has established a repressive and corrupt military regime in mineral producing regions to protect their “national interests”. Local populations rarely see any profits and are subjected to environmental damage and a systematic violation of human rights by both the rebel groups and the Congolese army itself.

These countries, rich in minerals such as cobalt, coltan, cassiterite, copper, and gold, are often marred by corruption, authoritarian repression, militarization, and civil war. Rebel groups, government and mining companies exploit mineral resources, fuelling civil and interstate conflict as players vie for control over riches.

While these players reap millions of dollars a year, the workers of gold mines such as this one put their lives at risk on a daily basis to extract precious metals in order to obtain meagre economic compensation.

The images of this reportage were made in one of the many gold mines of South Kivu province in eastern Congo.

© Guillem Valle

More at www.guillemvalle.com

Rape as War Weapon

The Democratic Republic of Congo has been embroiled in a bloody war for more than a decade.
Over the years, the Congolese army and various insurgent groups, including guerrillas from neighbouring countries such as Rwanda, have disputed strategic enclaves, mainly due to the presence of mineral deposits of gold, coltan, cassiterite, etc..

The parties in the Congo conflict, particularly in eastern provinces of North and South Kivu, are the Armed Forces of Congo (FARDC), where the Tutsi guerrillas of General Nkunda so called CNDP were integrated in just a few months ago,  and the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR).

The rape of women has become a powerful weapon. According to MSF, 90% of rapes in the country are committed by men wearing uniform.  “The attackers belong to both, FDLR and FARDC, but it is the latter who perpetrate more violations,” the director of Oxfam in Congo, Marcel Stoessel says.

The UN military mission in the country (MONUC), the largest UN contingent that has been sent to a war-torn country, has completed a mandate  of 10 years in Congo.

Since early this year MONUC started giving military support to Congolese army, more than 7,000 women and girls have been raped and more than 1,000 civilians have died, according to Oxfam. The same statistics show that for every demobilized member of the FDLR, one civilian is killed, 7 women are raped and 900 people are displaced.


Most of the NGOs operating in the area follow a similar work pattern: Offering medical and psychological care at first, then teaching them a trade, usually seam. Finally, integrating them back into society by helping them to find a way of life, home, etc.. This point is essential because rape is a stigma in Congo which means staying out of the whole society, something terrible in a society that has always lived in community.

© Guillem Valle

More at www.guillemvalle.com

Aug 19

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