Marielas De Los Angeles Montenego, 35, was sentenced to six years in Ilopango prison, San Salvador, for extortion. The prison, in the capital of El Salvador, is designed for 200 inmates but often holds more than 2,000 women. Photojournalist Meeri Koutaniemi aims to connect with her subjects and their emotions, and to translate this into her imagery. "I want to be as close as possible," she says. Her work has taken her across Latin America, Africa and Asia. Taken on a Canon EOS 5D Mark III (now succeeded by the Canon EOS 5D Mark IV) with a Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8L II USM lens at 70mm, 1/200 sec, f/2.8 and ISO 4000. © Meeri Koutaniemi
Photojournalist Meeri Koutaniemi likes to get as close as possible to her subjects – and their stories. "I always think that an individual is the window for larger phenomena," she says. "It's my strength as a photographer to go near people, and I want to stay in the moment. Sometimes I am so fascinated by the person that I forget to take a few steps back, and it blinds me from what else is happening."
Based in Helsinki, Finland, Meeri focuses on human rights issues, often through the lens of identity and activism. Across more than 70 countries, she has documented compelling stories of resilience and survival, including covering the humanitarian side of conflict and displacement, from the Syrian civil war to Myanmar's Rohingya crisis.
If she were to sum up her wide-ranging work, Meeri says she gravitates towards questions around identity, along with freedom of expression, speech and movement. "Freedom and methods for survival and resistance are very important to me," she says.