Yahoo – AFP,
September 10, 2016
Oslo (AFP)
- Facebook had restored by Saturday a post by Norwegian Prime Minister Erna
Solberg which it had taken down over an iconic Vietnam War photo of a naked
girl escaping a napalm bombing.
The world's
leading social network backtracked Friday on a decision to censor the historic
image because it had been flagged for violating standards regarding
inappropriate posts.
An active
social media user, Solberg defied Facebook early Friday by posting the
photograph, helping to bring the weeks-long controversy to a head.
But it was
deleted a few hours later by Facebook, in what is believed to be a first such
online censorship involving a government leader.
By Saturday
morning the post was restored on the Norwegian premier's Facebook page.
The online
giant stopped short of apologising, saying: "An image of a naked child
would normally be presumed to violate our Community Standards, and in some
countries might even qualify as child pornography.
"In
this case, we recognise the history and global importance of this image in documenting
a particular moment in time," it added.
Taken by
photographer Nick Ut Cong Huynh for the Associated Press, the 1972 picture of a
naked Vietnamese girl running from a napalm attack is considered one of the
war's defining images. It was honoured with the Pulitzer Prize.
After
Facebook reversed its position on the image, Solberg told the BBC she was a
"happy prime minister," saying: "It shows that using social
media can make (a) political change even in social media."


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