Images of ‘rubbish police’ land Swiss Press Photo Award
On the hunt for signs of dodgy dumping in Basel.
Eleni Kougionis
Photographer Eleni Kougionis has won first prize in the “Swiss stories” category at the annual awards, for her gallery on rubbish inspectors published by SWI swissinfo.ch.
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SWI swissinfo.ch-Reportage gewinnt Swiss Press Photo Award
In summer 2022 Kougionis and journalist Benjamin von Wyl wrote a very Swiss story for the ten-language SWI readership: about how Switzerland employs teams of “waste detectives” to track down people who illegally dump their rubbish.
Eleni Kougionis is a freelance photographer based in Basel.
Eleni Kougionis
The reportage from Basel, where Kougionis was born and lives, won one of six prizes awarded on Wednesday at the Press Photo Awards. “Her pictures document the almost forensic search for clues [by the inspectors] in remote corners of the city,” the jury said.
Kougionis followed a team of astronaut-looking inspectors on their quest to find culprits of illegal dumping, as the article outlines. It’s an unusual hunt, but an issue typical for Switzerland, and one which touches on a daily concern of many Swiss.
“I’m surprised to have won the prize,” Kougionis said. The reportage was a “commission, similar to those I often receive from media outlets. It wasn’t a lengthy photographic project”. She reckons the recognition is due to the topic being typically Swiss, albeit also rather unknown. “I didn’t even know that these inspectors existed,” she admitted.
Rubbish attracts rubbish. This is also true in Basel.
Eleni Kougionis
The waste inspectors receive reports of illegal waste disposal via tablet.
Eleni Kougionis
The loading area is still empty: the lorry at the beginning of its round.
Eleni Kougionis
The inspectors wear gloves whenever they reach into the rubbish.
Eleni Kougionis
Badly lit passages are hotspots of illegal rubbish.
Eleni Kougionis
Some people also see construction sites as an invitation to leave their rubbish lying around.
Eleni Kougionis
In Basel, household waste is collected in blue sacks. There are fines for black sacks.
Eleni Kougionis
The inspectors’ lorry seems small compared with the other vehicles at the waste incineration plant.
Eleni Kougionis
Many recycling bottles are found in the illegally dumped waste. Their disposal at the collection point is free in Switzerland.
Eleni Kougionis
The rubbish inspectors carefully inspect every possible piece of evidence
Eleni Kougionis
Th pig mascot on the rubbish sacks aims to raise awareness among the people of Basel for a clean city.
Eleni Kougionis
Most of the waste does not go along the conveyor.
Eleni Kougionis
At the end of the day the inspectors throw their disposable protective suits into the rubbish
Eleni Kougionis
If there is clear evidence, “litter sinners” will receive a fine.
Eleni Kougionis
Kougionis works particularly in the area of portrait photography and documentary-making. After training as a layout specialist at a printers, she studied photography at the Swiss journalism school (MAZ) in Lucerne.
During her training, she did an internship with a newspaper in Athens, Greece, and since graduating in 2015 she has worked as a freelance photographer and on her own projects. Her work has received various awards and has been presented at exhibitions.
In 2020 Kougionis won first prize in the same “Swiss stories” category at the Press Photo Awards, for a series on the “Black Peter” association, which organises projects in Basel to help people living below the poverty line.
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