https://www.boredpanda.com/award-winning-chinese-photographer-vanished-lu-guang-china-xinjiang/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=BPFacebook&fbclid=IwAR0IOc8nGIvZCiRfAGRk9eix8ftrFRCrfeTE3v_AQTuKJxAgQM0qTcTZq90
Award-Winning Photojournalist Disappears In China, And Here Are 21 Of His Pics China Don’t Want You To See
  Lu
 Guang’s photos have exposed the sides of China that its government 
isn’t keen on talking about: drug addicts, HIV patients, environmental 
problems, and so on. This time, however, the award-winning photographer 
has himself become the center of a story. His wife Xu Xiaoli claims she 
hasn’t heard from her husband since the 3rd of November.
On 23rd October, Guang flew to Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang region, where he had planned to attend some photography events. Later, he was to fly to Sichuan to meet his friend Mr Chen to participate in a charity event. But Mr Chen was unable to find or contact the photographer.
The photographer won at the 2004 World Press Photo competition for his exposure of “AIDS villages”, where people 678 people got infected with HIV after selling their blood. Out of 3,000 people, 678 have contracted HIV and 200 have died.
On 23rd October, Guang flew to Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang region, where he had planned to attend some photography events. Later, he was to fly to Sichuan to meet his friend Mr Chen to participate in a charity event. But Mr Chen was unable to find or contact the photographer.
Image credits: Xiaoli11032018
When
 Mr Chen asked Guang’s wife about his whereabouts, she had nothing. 
Investigating the situation, Ms Xu contacted the wife of the person who 
had invited her husband to Xinjiang. She was told both Mr. Lu and the 
host had been taken away by national security. Local officers from 
Zhejiang province, Mr Lu’s hometown, later confirmed this.
(Worker in Wuhai City, Inner Mongolia. April 10, 2005. Image credits: Lu Guang)
“He
 has been lost for more than 20 days”, said his wife. “As his most 
direct family member, I have not received any notice of his arrest,” Ms 
Xu said on Twitter.
 “I have repeatedly contacted Xinjiang police but have been unable to 
get through. It is our 20th wedding anniversary [next week]. We should 
be celebrating it together. I can only hope for his safe return. ”
(A heavy truck carrying coal and lime drives away, causing dust to fly and harming the nearby residents. Image credits: Lu Guang)
According to the BBC,
 Xinjiang has become notorious for its tight security controls, heavy 
surveillance and police presence, tackling what they describe as growing
 radicalism among the ethnic Uighur Muslim community.  The government is
 sensitive to criticism and has detained reporters who were 
investigating negative stories about China in the past.
(Eleven-year-old Xu Li of Hutsou is diagnosed with bone cancer. Image credits: Lu Guang)
“The
 reality in China is you never know if you’re going to get into trouble 
because there are no written rules,” the photographer said in an 
interview last year.
(Children
 also live in the industrial district. China is now the world’s 
second-largest economy. Its economic development has consumed lots of 
energy and generated plenty of pollution. Image credits: Lu Guang)
(On
 16 July 2010, the pipeline of the Newport Oil Wharf of Dalian Bay 
exploded, sending lots of oil into the sea. Many fishing boats were 
assigned to clean up the oil contamination for 8,150 times. Image 
credits: Lu Guang)The photographer won at the 2004 World Press Photo competition for his exposure of “AIDS villages”, where people 678 people got infected with HIV after selling their blood. Out of 3,000 people, 678 have contracted HIV and 200 have died.
Image credits: Lu Guang
(A woman carrying her severely ill grandson implores the sky to prevent the devil of pain returning. Image credits: Lu Guang)
(Disabled orphans adopted by charitable farmers. Image credits: Lu Guang)
(Children with cerebral palsy licks milk powder off a bed to feed. Image credits: Lu Guang)
(Laseng
 Temple has an over 200-year-old history, which includes the study of 
Mongolian medicines. It was seriously polluted by the surrounding 
factories, so few pilgrims go there now. Image credits: Lu Guang)
(Many
 factories have been moved from the country’s east to its central and 
western parts. Employees work in the dust. Image credits: Lu Guang)
(The Baotou Steel plant dumps mineral processing sewage into the tailings dam. Image credits: Lu Guang)
Image credits: Lu Guang
(The chemical industrial park of Yanwei Port in the city of Lianyungang dumps sewage in the sea. Image credits: Lu Guang)
(In
 the jeans-producing village of Xintang Town, in Guangdong, workers gain
 the stone for grinding the denim every morning. Image credits: Lu Guang)
Image credits: Lu Guang
(A wife cares for her dying husband. Image credits: Lu Guang)
(Qi
 Guihua, held here by her husband, fell ill when she returned to the 
village from Beijing to celebrate the Spring Festival. She died two 
hours after this photograph was taken. Image credits: Lu Guang)
(Families such as this one have sold almost everything valuable in their home to help meet medical expenses. Image credits: Lu Guang)
(A
 young girl warms her hands in winter. Her father is infected with HIV 
and still cares for five children and his elderly parents. Image 
credits: Lu Guang)
(Two girls prepare for the funeral of their six-year-old brother, who died from AIDS. Image credits: Lu Guang)























 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment