World Press Photo of the Year Awards 2018 winner captures powerful image of masked Venezuelan protester engulfed in flames
Ronaldo Schemidt's photograph beat out 73,000 other entries - including images from the London terror attacks in Westminster and last year's mass festival shooting in Las Vegas - with a breathtaking shot that he took without looking
THIS INCREDIBLE image of a man engulfed in flames has won the prestigious 2018 World Press Photo of the Year award.
It was taken during violent clashes between Venezuelan protesters and riot police in May 2017 and judges said it invoked instant emotion and symbolised a country “burning".
Ronaldo Schemidt of French photo agency Agence France-Presse triumphed over 73,000 entries.
His competition included photography from the Rohingya crisis, the war in Iraq and the aftermath of a terror attack in London among other tragedies.
Ronaldo's image of a masked protester was taken in May 2017 while he was covering protests against the regime of President Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela.
The man in the photograph, 28-year-old Victor Salazar, was trying to destroy a police motorbike when a gas tank exploded in his face and he went up in flames.
Schemidt said: “I felt the explosion behind me and I felt the heat, and at that moment I turned around, already shooting, but without seeing what was going on.”
According to competition organisers the man survived the incident with first and second-degree burns.
He was pictured as he ran away while a cloak of fire envelopes his body.
Schemidt dedicated the photo “to his family and all the people of Venezuela”.
World Press Photo director Lard Boering told Agence France-Presse after the ceremony: “This is an immensely powerful photo and this is not an easy picture to take.”
An image called ‘Waiting for Freedom’, which was shot by Neil Aldridge and featured a southern white rhinoceros, drugged and blindfolded, won the environment category.
A photo taken at the site of the Las Vegas mass festival shooting in October 2017 won the Spot News Stories category.
Alain Schroeder won the sports prize with his black-and-white photo of young Indonesian jockeys competing in a horse race.
An image by Toby Melville shows a passerby comforting an American tourist who was injured in the London terror attack at Westminster Bridge in March 2017.
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