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Check FAQAbout Vivek
Vivek Singh is a journalist, photographer and filmmaker based in New Delhi, India. http://www.viveksinghphoto.com/ List of clients include, The Wall Street Journal, California Sunday Magazine, The New York Times Magazine, Fortune Magazine US, Los Angeles Times, Al Jazeera, Buzzfeed News (US), Der Spiegel, The New York Times(India Ink-Blog), The Caravan Magazine(India), The Globe and Mail (Report On Business Magazine), Fast Company Magazine, CNN and Turner.
Portfolio
"The Chrurachandpur Incident" Churachandpur, Manipur, India: On just two days — August 31 and September 1, 2015 — nine people died in police firing and violence during mass protests against three new state bills. The largest district in Manipur, CCpur as it's commonly known, lies only 65km south of the capital, Imphal, which had recently witnessed a two-month-long agitation for an Inner Line Permit (ILP) system in the state. (The ILP is currently operational in Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland and Mizoram.) Just as those protests died down, Manipur was on the boil again with the passage of three land bills that the hill tribes are opposed to, on the grounds that they play into the hands of the Meiteis, the dominant inhabitants of the #Imphal valley that makes up 10 percent of the landmass of the state. One of the most controversial clauses relates to the right to property ownership. The state assembly has set 1951 as the base year to identify non-indigenous people, who are regarded as ou
Searching For Google CEO Sundar Pichai, The Most Powerful Tech Giant You've Never Heard Of
The article discusses the dominance of Android phones in the Indian market, where they hold a 64% market share, in contrast to Apple's less than 2% share. It highlights the potential for growth in India, where only 26% of the population owns a smartphone. Google's Nexus 6P is advertised heavily, but the growth is expected to come from affordable phones and improved connectivity. Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google, emphasizes the transformative power of technology and connectivity in India. The article also touches on Facebook's failed Free Basics program in India due to a ban on differential pricing plans. Google, on the other hand, is focusing on reducing data usage and providing free Wi-Fi at railway stations, as well as preparing for the next wave of internet users who will likely speak various Indic languages, by supporting 11 native languages.
Photographs for the Wall Street Journal on rape allegations in the north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.
Nepal’s hospitals stretched to their limit
The article reports on the aftermath of a devastating earthquake in Nepal, focusing on the situation in Kathmandu and the rural areas. It describes how medical staff at Bir Hospital in Kathmandu are working extended shifts to cope with the influx of victims. Foreign volunteers are also mentioned as playing a significant role in supporting the hospital's operations. The article highlights the plight of the earthquake victims, including an eight-year-old girl with a skull fracture, and notes that the death toll has surpassed 7,000, with many casualties now being brought in from rural regions.
Internal displacement story out of the north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh for the Wall Street Journal.
Slide Show
The article reports on a series of violent attacks in the remote villages of N.K. Khagrabari and Narayanguri in Assam, India, near the Bhutan border. The attacks, which left 39 Muslims dead, were allegedly carried out by the National Democratic Front of Bodoland, an ethnic Bodo militant group. The violence is part of a long-standing conflict in the Bodoland Territorial Areas District, where Bodos, a tribal group, are seeking statehood and fear the dilution of their culture by non-Bodo ethnic groups. The article includes accounts from survivors and details the displacement of both Bodo and Muslim villagers due to ongoing violence and fear of retaliation. The journalist, Vivek Singh, supported by a grant from the Manuel Rivera Ortiz Foundation, provides a firsthand account of the aftermath and speaks with various stakeholders, including a former militant turned politician who denies his party's involvement in the attacks.
Slide Show
The article tells the story of Hayat Ashraf Dar, a 21-year-old man from Srinagar, Kashmir, who lost his eyesight to pellet gun injuries inflicted by Indian troops and police. The narrative describes the impact of the injury on Dar's life, his adjustment to blindness, and his determination to stay informed about the situation in Kashmir despite his disability. The article also touches on the controversial use of pellet guns by the Jammu Kashmir Police, which they claim are nonlethal, and the treatment of pellet injury victims at S.M.H.S. Hospital in Srinagar. The story is a personal account of the human cost of the conflict in Kashmir and the resilience of its people.
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