General News, 1st prize
James Hill
The New York Times
The New York Times
22 September, 2004
A blackboard at School Number One is covered with messages from those visiting the site. Schools were shut down for two weeks following the violent ending of a three-day siege, in which separatists demanding independence for Chechnya held over 1,000 pupils, parents and teachers of School Number One hostage. More than 330 people lost their lives. School Number One became a shrine to the victims of the siege. Officials decided not to re-open it, but to build two new schools for the pupils who had studied there.
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