The Guardian US 
and Washington Post were awarded the most prestigious Pulitzer prize on 
Monday for coverage of secret surveillance by the U.S. National Security
 Agency that sparked wide debate over government spying. Reuters won in international reporting for its coverage of the violent persecution of a Muslim minority in Myanmar who in efforts to flee often fall into the hands of brutal human-trafficking networks. The
 celebrated prizes, awarded by Columbia University, are the most 
respected in U.S. journalism and can bring badly needed attention and 
recognition to newspapers and websites suffering from economic pressures
 and budget constraints. The 
prize-winning work by the Guardian US and The Washington Post in the 
Pulitzer's public service category was based on documents leaked by 
former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, who revealed details of global 
electronic surveillance by the U.S. spy agency. Reporting
 on the leaks not only sparked international debate over the limits of 
government surveillance but prompted President Barack Obama to introduce
 curbs on NSA spying powers. "We 
are particularly grateful for our colleagues across the world who 
supported the Guardian in circumstances which threatened to stifle our 
reporting," Guardian Editor in Chief Alan Rusbridger said in a 
statement. "And we share this 
honor, not only with our colleagues at The Washington Post, but also 
with Edward Snowden, who risked so much in the cause of the public 
service which has today been acknowledged by the award of this 
prestigious prize," he said. Russia
 granted Snowden temporary asylum last year after the U.S. Justice 
Department charged him with violating the Espionage Act. In
 giving Reuters its first Pulitzer for text coverage, the board 
commended Jason Szep and Andrew R.C. Marshall for their "courageous 
reports" on the Rohingya, who in their efforts to flee the Southeast 
Asian country often fall victim to human-trafficking networks. "For
 two years, Reuters reporters have tirelessly investigated terrible 
human-rights abuses in a forgotten corner of the Muslim world, bringing 
the international dimensions of the oppressed Rohingya of Myanmar to 
global attention," Stephen Adler, Reuters editor-in-chief, said in a 
statement. Szep, from Washington, 
said: "What we were writing about was under-reported. I hope through 
this, there is greater international attention to the risks and presence
 of religious violence in Myanmar." Reuters
 was also a finalist in the investigative reporting category for a 
series by Megan Twohey, which exposed the underground market for adopted
 children. Her work won praise for "triggering governmental action to 
curb the practice" of exchanging unwanted kids online. Goran
 Tomasevic of Reuters was named a finalist for breaking news 
photography, with judges recognizing "his sequence of photographs that 
chronicle two hours of fierce combat on the rebel frontline in Syria's 
civil war." The breaking news 
photography prize went to Tyler Hicks of The New York Times for coverage
 of the attack by Islamist militants at Westgate mall in Nairobi, Kenya.
 The feature photography prize went to Josh Haner of The New York Times 
for an essay on a Boston Marathon bomb blast victim. The
 Boston Globe won for its breaking news coverage of the 2013 Boston 
Marathon bombing and the ensuing manhunt. Finalists included The Arizona
 Republic for coverage of a wildfire that killed 19 firefighters and The
 Washington Post for coverage of the mass shooting at the Washington 
Navy Yard. The prize for 
investigative reporting went to Chris Hamby of The Center for Public 
Integrity for reports on how some lawyers and doctors rigged a system to
 deny benefits to coal miners stricken with black lung disease. The
 prize for explanatory reporting went to Eli Saslow of the Washington 
Post for work on the prevalence of food stamps in post-recession 
America. The prize for local 
reporting went to Will Hobson and Michael LaForgia of the Tampa Bay 
Times for an investigation into squalid housing conditions for the 
city's homeless population. The prize for national reporting went to 
David Philipps of The Gazette in Colorado Springs, Colorado, for his 
examination of how wounded combat veterans are mistreated. No award was given in the category of feature writing. The
 commentary prize went to Stephen Henderson of the Detroit Free Press 
and the criticism prize went to Inga Saffron of the Philadelphia 
Inquirer. The editorial writing prize was awarded to the staff of The 
Oregonian and editorial cartooning went to Kevin Siers of the Charlotte 
Observer. For an example of the 
work by Szep and Marshall see Special Report: Thailand secretly supplies
 Myanmar refugees to trafficking rings reut.rs/1iPKLkK
Guardian, Washington Post win Pulitzers for U.S. spying coverage
 
			Reuters
                
				
					
				
				
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
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