Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
International

Series On Hunger In India Posted On World Press Photo's Instagram Page Sparks Outrage

IANS, 25 Jul, 2018 12:30 PM

    A photo series highlighting hunger in India that was shared on World Press Photo’s Instagram handle has been facing flak for its depiction of poverty.

     

    The images, clicked by Italian photographer Alessio Mamo, show a series of undernourished, poor people standing in front of a table with food on it, with their hands covering their faces.

     

    The photos, taken in villages of Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, has a caption that reads, brought...a table and some fake food, and...told people to dream about some food that they would like to find on their table.”

     
     
     

    These photographs are from Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh two of the poorest states of India. From the series "Dreaming Food", a conceptual project about hunger issue in India. ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ [This project has been the subject of much online debate. Please read Alessio Mamo’s statement, released on 24 July 2018, giving more details and apologising for any offence: https://medium.com/@alessio.mamo/my-statement-on-dreaming-food-7169257d2c5c] ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ My name is Alessio Mamo (@alessio_mamo) an Italian freelance photographer based in Catania, Sicily. In 2008 I began my career in photojournalism focusing on contemporary social, political and economic issues. I extensively cover issues related to refugee displacement and migration starting in Sicily, and extending most recently to the Middle East. I was awarded 2nd prize in the People Singles category of #WPPh2018 and this week I’m taking over World Press Photo's Instagram account. ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Despite economic growth, a majority of the Indian population still lives in extreme poverty and disease. Behind India’s new-found economic strength are 300 million poor people who live on less than $1 per day. Government figures may indicate a reduction in poverty. But the truth is, with increasing global food prices, poverty is spreading everywhere like a swarm of locusts. These pictures are taken in rural areas where conditions are worse than in the cities and where close to 70% of India’s population reside today. Statistics show that 2.1 million children under 5 years old die of malnutrition annually. The idea of this project was born after reading the statistics of how much food is thrown away in the West, especially during Christmas time. I brought with me a table and some fake food, and I told people to dream about some food that they would like to find on their table. ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ #WPPh2018#asia #dreamingfood #india

    A post shared by World Press Photo Foundation (@worldpressphoto) on

     
     

    Mamo, a well known photographer, had won the second prize in the People category of the World Press Photo of the Year Awards 2018, for his photograph of an 11-year-old victim of a missile explosion in Kirkuk, Iraq.

     

    However, Mamo’s India photographs, from his series “Dreaming Food” – a “conceptual project about hunger issue in India” seems to have hit a raw nerve.

     

    According to the photographer, the shots are from two of the poorest states in India. However, it remains unclear as to what metric he used to come to the conclusion.

     

    There was severe backlash against Mamo and World Press Photo on social media, including from photojournalists, with many contending that the photograph had depicted poverty in a way that was exploitative and gimmicky, a portrayal that is known as poverty porn.

     

    Taking to Facebook, one user opined that he could not think of a better example of someone casting ethics aside and pursuing their own selfish and distorted ideas by using people to gain recognition and awards.

     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     

    Mamo’s post on Instagram too received many critical comments, with users calling it “ethically deplorable” and cruel.

     

    Facebook users too made their point felt,

     
     

    Deeply problematic and exploitative series by a World Press Photo winning photographer published on their IG feed. I'm...

    Posted by Hari Adivarekar on Monday, 23 July 2018
     
     

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BlimtuvnQ9S/ Oh dear, World Press Photo at it again. Too bad I called it a gimmick to an...

    Posted by Debmalya Ray Choudhuri on Monday, 23 July 2018
     
     

    Mamo, on his part, responded to the criticisms, clarifying that the photos were not shot with the involvement of World Press Photo but with a local humanitarian organisation.

     

    He also wrote, “My intention was exactly to represent in a stereotyped way these Indian landscape in order to reinforce the concept. This was the idea behind, maybe I did it wrong, or maybe just you don’t like or you think it’s unethical, but the concept was to problematize food waste in front of the hunger in this area of the world.”

     

    In a statement released on Monday evening, World Press Photo pointed to its guidelines and said that these are kept “under constant review to learn from the debates about pictures and projects the photographers share”.

     

    “Photo contest winners and digital storytelling contest winners are given the opportunity to takeover the World Press Photo Instagram account for a week to share work of their choosing...Alessio Mamo’s takeover started on 16 July and ended on 22 July. Other than his portrait of Manal, none of the photographs Alessio has shared were awarded prizes in the photo contest...”

    MORE International ARTICLES

    WATCH: Sikh Man's Video Waking Up Muslim Neighbours For Sehri Goes Viral

    WATCH: Sikh Man's Video Waking Up Muslim Neighbours For Sehri Goes Viral
    A video clip has gone viral in which an unidentified elderly Sikh man seems to have taken the responsibility of waking up his Muslim neighbours in Jammu and Kashmir's Pulwama district for Sehri - pre-dawn Ramzan meal.

    WATCH: Sikh Man's Video Waking Up Muslim Neighbours For Sehri Goes Viral

    Identification Without Turban? 82-Yr-Old Sikh Man Leaves France After 27 Years To Live In India

    Identification Without Turban? 82-Yr-Old Sikh Man Leaves France After 27 Years To Live In India
    In March 1991, Ranjit Singh left for France in search for better prospects. Twenty-seven years on, he is back in India, having lost subsistence allowance for refusing to forego his identity as a turbaned Sikh.

    Identification Without Turban? 82-Yr-Old Sikh Man Leaves France After 27 Years To Live In India

    South African Fined For Racist Remarks Against Hindus

    South African Fined For Racist Remarks Against Hindus
    A white South African has been slapped with a fine and asked to do 50 hours of community service for making racist remarks on Facebook about Hindus.

    South African Fined For Racist Remarks Against Hindus

    Indians To Be Hit Hard As Work Permit Of H-4 Visa Holders To Be Rescinded

    Indians To Be Hit Hard As Work Permit Of H-4 Visa Holders To Be Rescinded
      The move to rescind work authorisation to certain categories of H-4 visa holders is in final stages, the Trump administration has told a US court.

    Indians To Be Hit Hard As Work Permit Of H-4 Visa Holders To Be Rescinded

    Pak Elections: Non-Muslim Voters Up By 30 PC; Hindus Maintain Majority

    The non-Muslim voters have registered an increase of 30 per cent over the last five years, the Dawn newspaper reported citing an official document.

    Pak Elections: Non-Muslim Voters Up By 30 PC; Hindus Maintain Majority

    32-Year-Old Sikh Truck Driver JASPREET SINGH Dies Two Weeks After Being Shot In Ohio

    32-Year-Old Sikh Truck Driver JASPREET SINGH Dies Two Weeks After Being Shot In Ohio
    A 32-year-old Sikh truck driver, who was shot at two weeks ago in Ohio, has succumbed to his injuries, with prosecutors saying they will seek a murder charge against the accused in the case.

    32-Year-Old Sikh Truck Driver JASPREET SINGH Dies Two Weeks After Being Shot In Ohio