Dmitry Beliakov
Dmitry Beliakov is a Russian photojournalist, born in 1970, in the Vologda region, in Northwestern Russia.
Career
Through the course of career Beliakov covered seven conflicts: Chechnya 1994-96,1999-2010; the Russian-Georgian conflict of 2008; Nagorno-Karabakh conflict 2016, 2020; the war in Syria ; the war in the Donbass areaFrom 1999 to 2007, he documented the Second Chechen War. Throughout this period, he tried to remain neutral through his images, neither favouring the Russian government nor the Chechen rebels. As a war photojournalist he faced ample danger with land mines and mortar fire. He was also confronted by censors and restrictions during his coverage of the conflict.
In September 2004, Beliakov covered the Beslan school siege in North Ossetia, documenting the events from a nearby rooftop. His photographs from the crisis, including a sequence showing a 6-year-old survivor, Aida Sidakova, shortly after the explosions, were widely circulated and received international recognition. Following the attack, Beliakov spent one week with colleagues locating the child, eventually confirming that she had survived with shrapnel injuries.
Beliakov has received many respected awards in photojournalism, including Amnesty UK Media Awards 2019/ Photojournalism; IMAGELY 2016 Fund Grant; POY 2015; NPPA 2010; OPC 2005 – Borovik Award. His work has been published in many notable newspapers and magazines, including The Sunday Times Magazine, Paris Match, GEO magazine, The New York Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer and the British Telegraph Magazine. He was profiled in a CBS News and Showtime Independent Films documentary drama called Three Days in September in 2006.
Beliakov's work has been exhibited in Russia, Italy, UAE, Armenia and United States. In 2011 his documentary project of b/w portraits of camera-shy Russian Special Forces was exhibited at the State Central Museum of Contemporary History of Russia.
2012 to 2014 photographer worked on a . Project was . Works were exhibited at the State Museum of GULAG.
In August 2014, while covering the War in Donbass in eastern Ukraine, Dmitry Beliakov and his colleague Mark Franchetti, a reporter for the British newspaper The Sunday Times, pleaded with the pro-Russian rebel leader Alexander Khodakovsky to release Iryna Dovhan, a local resident who had been abducted by the insurgent group Vostok Battalion and subjected to imprisonment, torture and humiliation, for being accused of being a spy for the Ukrainian forces. This plead came after a photograph of her mistreatment taken by another photojournalist, Maurício Lima, stirred widespread outrage in Ukraine, prompted a social media effort to identify her and drew the attention of United Nations human rights monitors. The plead was attended and she was released.
2021-2022 Beliakov worked on a documentary photoproject “Armenian Journal” about post-war Armenia. Works were in republican capital Yerevan, Armenia.
In 2022, following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which he publicly opposed, Beliakov relocated to the United States with his family. The move was supported in part by the Andrei Sakharov Foundation, and he subsequently received a fellowship at .
February 2023 Beliakov was invited by The John and Mary Frances Patton Peace and War Center at Norwich University to hold an exhibition of works from Donbas with a name and a special panel presentation
Beliakov currently lives in Vermont with his family and across New England.