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Norway's PM Attacks Facebook 'Censorship' Over Vietnam Photo

The image, which was of a naked girl fleeing from a napalm attack, was also deleted from Prime Minister Erna Solberg's own Facebook profile.
The image, which was of a naked girl fleeing from a napalm attack, was also deleted from Prime Minister Erna Solberg's own Facebook profile.
norway s pm attacks facebook  censorship  over vietnam photo
The front cover of Norway's largest newspaper by circulation, Aftenposten, is seen at a news stand in Oslo, Norway September 9, 2016. Credit: NTB Scanpix/Cornelius Poppe/via REUTERS
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The image, which was of a naked girl fleeing from a napalm attack, was also deleted from Prime Minister Erna Solberg's own Facebook profile.

The front cover of Norway's largest newspaper by circulation, Aftenposten, is seen at a news stand in Oslo, Norway September 9, 2016. Credit: NTB Scanpix/Cornelius Poppe/via REUTERS

The front cover of Norway's largest newspaper by circulation, Aftenposten, is seen at a news stand in Oslo, Norway September 9, 2016. Credit: NTB Scanpix/Cornelius Poppe/via REUTERS

Oslo: Norway's prime minister joined a campaign by a Norwegian newspaper on Friday accusing Facebook Inc of undue censorship by barring a Vietnam War era news photograph showing a naked girl fleeing a napalm attack.

The social media giant erased the iconic photograph, showing children running from a bombed village, from the Facebook pages of several Norwegian authors and media outlets, including top-selling newspaper Aftenposten.

Captured in 1972 by Pulitzer Prize-winner Nick Ut of the Associated Press, the image of screaming children running from a napalm attack shows a naked nine-year-old girl at its center.

Aftenposten splashed the photograph across the front page of its newspaper on Friday, next to a large Facebook logo, and wrote a front-page editorial headlined "Dear Mark Zuckerberg", arguing that the network was undermining democracy.

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Conservative Prime Minister Erna Solberg then posted the photograph on her own Facebook profile, writing that it had contributed to change the course of world history. The image later disappeared from the page.

"Facebook gets it wrong when they censor such pictures. It limits the freedom of speech," Solberg wrote. "I say yes to healthy, open and free debate - online and wherever else we go. But I say no to this form of censorship."

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Solberg in her posting also praised Facebook for combating pictures of child abuse. Aftenposten, in its editorial, said Facebook should be able to tell the difference between child pornography and famous war photography.

Facebook said in a statement its rules were more blunt than the company itself would prefer, adding that restrictions on nudity were necessary on a global platform.

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This article went live on September ninth, two thousand sixteen, at forty minutes past eight in the evening.

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