0311
Diamond Member
An organization that honored The Associated Press’ Nick Ut with its “ photo of the year ” in 1973 for a picture of a girl running from a napalm attack in the Vietnam War says it has “suspended its attribution” to Ut because of doubts over who actually took it.
World Press Photo’s report Friday adds to the muddle over an issue that has split the photographic communita movie earlier this year, “The Stringer,” questioned Ut’s authorship. The photo of a naked and terrified Kim Phuc became an iconic symbol of the war’s tragedy.
After two investigations, The Associated Press said it found no definitive evidence to warrant stripping Ut’s photo credit. The AP said it was possible Ut took the picture, but the passage of time made it impossible to fully prove, and could find no evidence to prove anyone else did.
This was one the most iconic pictures of a very sad and very ugly event in our country's history, I say this as a person who served. This poor girl was hit with napalm. Basically jellied gasoline. The pain she has felt, and the scares she still carries are a reminder of a war that should have fought.
World Press Photo’s report Friday adds to the muddle over an issue that has split the photographic communita movie earlier this year, “The Stringer,” questioned Ut’s authorship. The photo of a naked and terrified Kim Phuc became an iconic symbol of the war’s tragedy.
After two investigations, The Associated Press said it found no definitive evidence to warrant stripping Ut’s photo credit. The AP said it was possible Ut took the picture, but the passage of time made it impossible to fully prove, and could find no evidence to prove anyone else did.
This was one the most iconic pictures of a very sad and very ugly event in our country's history, I say this as a person who served. This poor girl was hit with napalm. Basically jellied gasoline. The pain she has felt, and the scares she still carries are a reminder of a war that should have fought.
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