• Ronaldo Schedmit's picture nominated for the Photo of the Year at the World Press photo contest shows José Víctor Salazar Balza, 28, on fire amid violent clashes with Venezuelan riot police during a protest against President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas on May 3, 2017. Ronaldo Schemidt / AFP Photo / World Press Photo handout via REUTERS
    Ronaldo Schedmit's picture nominated for the Photo of the Year at the World Press photo contest shows José Víctor Salazar Balza, 28, on fire amid violent clashes with Venezuelan riot police during a protest against President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas on May 3, 2017. Ronaldo Schemidt / AFP Photo / World Press Photo handout via REUTERS
  • Australian photographer Adam Ferguson for New York Times is nominated for his picture that shows Aisha, 14, standing for a portrait in Maiduguri, Borno State, Nigeria on 21 September 2017. Aisha was kidnapped by Boko Haram then assigned a suicide bombing mission. After she was strapped with explosives, she found help instead of blowing herself and others up. Adam Ferguson / New York Times / EPA
    Australian photographer Adam Ferguson for New York Times is nominated for his picture that shows Aisha, 14, standing for a portrait in Maiduguri, Borno State, Nigeria on 21 September 2017. Aisha was kidnapped by Boko Haram then assigned a suicide bombing mission. After she was strapped with explosives, she found help instead of blowing herself and others up. Adam Ferguson / New York Times / EPA
  • Irish photographer Ivor Prickett for New York Times is up for nomination for his picture showing civilians who had remained in west Mosul during the battle to retake the city, lining up for an aid distribution on March 15 2017. Ivor Prickett / New York Times / EPA
    Irish photographer Ivor Prickett for New York Times is up for nomination for his picture showing civilians who had remained in west Mosul during the battle to retake the city, lining up for an aid distribution on March 15 2017. Ivor Prickett / New York Times / EPA
  • Reuters' Toby Melville is nominated for his photo of pedestrians in London tending to a victim lying on the pavement after being thrown off Westminster Bridge during a terror attack on March 22, 2017. Toby Melville / Reuters
    Reuters' Toby Melville is nominated for his photo of pedestrians in London tending to a victim lying on the pavement after being thrown off Westminster Bridge during a terror attack on March 22, 2017. Toby Melville / Reuters
  • Reuters' Toby Melville is nominated for his photo of pedestrians in London tending to a victim lying on the pavement after being thrown off Westminster Bridge during a terror attack on March 22, 2017. Toby Melville / Reuters
    Reuters' Toby Melville is nominated for his photo of pedestrians in London tending to a victim lying on the pavement after being thrown off Westminster Bridge during a terror attack on March 22, 2017. Toby Melville / Reuters
  • AFP photographer Juan Barreto's nomination: A demonstrator is caught on fire, after the gas tank of a police motorbike exploded, during clashes in a protest against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, in Caracas on May 3, 2017. Juan Barreto / AFP Photo
    AFP photographer Juan Barreto's nomination: A demonstrator is caught on fire, after the gas tank of a police motorbike exploded, during clashes in a protest against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, in Caracas on May 3, 2017. Juan Barreto / AFP Photo
  • British AFP Photographer Oli Scarff's nomination for the sport's category: Competitors from the opposing teams, the Up'ards and the Down'ards, reach for the ball during the annual Royal Shrovetide Football Match in Ashbourne, northern England. Oli Scarff / AFP Photo
    British AFP Photographer Oli Scarff's nomination for the sport's category: Competitors from the opposing teams, the Up'ards and the Down'ards, reach for the ball during the annual Royal Shrovetide Football Match in Ashbourne, northern England. Oli Scarff / AFP Photo
  • Picture nominated for the Spot News Singles at World Press Photo contest shows an Iraqi special forces soldier shooting dead an ISIL suicide bomber in Mosul on March 3, 2017 Goran Tomasevic / Reuters
    Picture nominated for the Spot News Singles at World Press Photo contest shows an Iraqi special forces soldier shooting dead an ISIL suicide bomber in Mosul on March 3, 2017 Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

Fiery Venezuela image among world photo award nominations


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A searing image of a Venezuelan protester who caught fire during clashes with riot police has won AFP photographer Ronaldo Schemidt a nomination for the World Press Photo of the Year award.

The picture by the Mexico-based photographer for Agence France-Presse is among six images taken by five photographers nominated for the prestigious annual prize, the World Press Photo Foundation in Amsterdam revealed Wednesday.

The winner will be announced on April 12, and recognise the photographer "whose visual creativity and skills made a picture that captures or represents an event or issue of great journalistic importance in the last year", it said.

The four other finalists include Patrick Brown of Panos Pictures, for his shocking shot of the bodies of drowned Rohingya refugees; Adam Ferguson of the New York Times with a sombre veiled portrait of one of the Boko Haram victims and Reuters photographer Toby Melville, with his image of a passerby comforting an injured woman after the Westminster Bridge attack in London.

Rounding out the nominees is Ivor Prickett, also from Panos Pictures, who has two of his shots taken in the Iraqi city of Mosul in the running for the prestigious title.

"The best visual journalism is not of something, it is about something. It should matter to the people to whom it speaks," said Lars Boering, managing director of the World Press Photo Foundation.

Schemidt, 46, is Venezuelan, although he left the country 18 years ago, and told AFP getting such "recognition is important to me".

"It doesn't matter whether my pictures stay on my computer or get published worldwide, but this (nomination) means people will see what's happening" in Venezuela.

Some 42 photographers from 22 countries have been nominated in each of the eight categories.

The winner of the World Press Photo of the Year will receive €10,000 in cash and a selection of Canon camera equipment.

A total of 4,548 photographers from 125 countries submitted 73,044 images, which have been judged by a panel chaired by Magdalena Herrera, director of photography for Geo France.

Last year's award went to Associated Press photographer Burhan Ozbilici, for his shocking image of a Turkish policeman who assassinated the Russian ambassador at the opening of an Ankara exhibition.

But the decision set off a controversy, as it caught the exact moment of a murder.

"It was a very, very difficult decision, but in the end we felt that the picture of the year was an explosive image that really spoke to the hatred of our times," acknowledged 2017 jury member Mary Calvert.

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