Winners of the CPB Photo Awards 2024
Hindustan TimesWinners of the CPB Photo Awards 2024 See the winning images from India's leading photo awards.. 1 / 8 View Photos in a new improved layout A newly-married Irular couple at Mahabalipuram during the Maasi Magam festival.. 2 / 8 View Photos in a new improved layout Arya and Akshaya, students of the first batch of female students of Kathakali at Kerala Kalamandalam seen practicing Kannusadhakam during their 5am Sadhakam in Thrissur district, in Kerala on June 29, 2023. With their entry, it’s curtains for a 90-year-old, men-only tradition at the Kalamandalam.. 3 / 8 View Photos in a new improved layout Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath seen participating in a roadshow aboard a bulldozer in support of BJP candidate Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore from the Jhotwara constituency ahead of the Rajasthan Assembly elections in Jaipur, Rajasthan, India, on November 23, 2023. Many villages and farmlands were submerged in Delhi around the Yamuna river due to heavy rainfall and floods primarily caused by climate change.. 5 / 8 View Photos in a new improved layout A Brahminy kite seen attempting to snatch a frog from the beak of a Black Headed Ibis in Chilika Lake, India. The desert dwellers of Khetolai, Loharki and Chacha villages are still paying the price of India's nuclear story that unfolded in the sand dunes nearby,” writes Chinky Shukla, winner of the Emami Art Regional Photographer of the Year award for her series ‘When Buddha Stopped Smiling.’ 7 / 8 View Photos in a new improved layout “Farming in India can easily become a debt trap, successive governments have struggled to stem suicides among cultivators by initiatives like Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana, a crop insurance program, or small loans via KCC or Kisan credit card but many aren’t able to access loans or insurance because they don’t have land deeds in their name, often because paperwork is incomplete or they’re tenants,” writes Anindito Mukherjee, winner of the Photo Story of the Year for his series ‘The perils of the smallholders who feed India.’