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This Happened

This Happened — June 8: Napalm Girl Photograph

This Happened — June 8 from Worldcrunch on Vimeo.

On this day in 1972, photographer Nick Ut captured the devastating impact of the Vietnam War on innocent civilians, particularly children. The girl in the photo is Kim Phuc, a nine-year-old Vietnamese girl, running naked and severely burned from a napalm attack.

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What happened to Kim Phuc after the Napalm Girl photograph was taken?

Kim Phuc suffered severe burns from the napalm attack captured in the photograph. She underwent multiple surgeries and endured a long recovery process. Eventually, she sought asylum in Canada and later became a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador, advocating for peace and supporting organizations aiding child victims of war.

How did the "Napalm Girl" photograph change the Vietnam War?

The "Napalm Girl" photograph played a significant role in shaping public opinion and awareness of the Vietnam War. The shocking and graphic nature of the image, along with its widespread circulation, contributed to a shift in public sentiment against the war and increased pressure on governments to seek a peaceful resolution.

What is the historical legacy of the "Napalm Girl" photograph?

The "Napalm Girl" photograph remains an iconic and enduring work of war photography, a symbol of the human suffering caused by war. It has become a powerful representation of the need for compassion, peace, and the protection of innocent lives during armed conflicts.

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Geopolitics

Kenya Is Coming To Help Haiti — And Where Are Our Neighbors From The Americas?

A lack of action by countries in the Western Hemisphere could increase the risk of Haiti truly turning into a failed state.

A person with a haitian flag around their neck holds a protest sign

A marcher walks ahead of the large crowd of about 3,500 members of the Florida Haitian community demanding relief for their country. August 14, 2023.

Jorge Heine

-Analysis-

The kidnapping and subsequent release of U.S. nurse Alix Dorsainvil and her young daughter in Haiti in early August drew brief international attention to crime in the impoverished Caribbean nation.

But the truth is that such kidnappings are commonplace for Haitians, and they rarely receive attention from outside the country itself. Indeed, Haiti has become a forgotten crisis to many international bodies and foreign governments. News that Kenya has offered to lead an international effort to bring order to the country only underscores the lack of action by other nations closer to Haiti.

As someone who has written a book, “Fixing Haiti,” on the last concerted outside intervention – the United Nations’ stabilizing mission (MINUSTAH) – I fear the lack of action by countries in the Americas could increase the risk of Haiti transitioning from a fragile state to a failed one.

MINUSTAH was the first U.N. mission formed by a majority of Latin American troops, with Chile and Brazil taking the lead. The prospect of outsourcing that role now to Kenya may have sparked concerns from human rights groups, but it might also lead to soul-searching questions in capitals from Washington to Brasília, as well as at United Nations headquarters in New York.

Haiti has been falling into chaos for the last two years, ever since the murder of President Jovenel Moïseoïse in July 2021. A subsequent earthquake that struck the southern part of the country only further worsened the plight of Haitians.

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