Search:      
E & P Web
  America's Oldest Journal Covering the Newspaper Industry Sunday, November 22, 2009  
 

Joe the Plumber Hits Media Coverage, Tells 'E&P' He Hopes Palin Does Not Run in 2012
'E&P' on Twitter: Here's How to Hit the Tweet Spot!
McClatchy Launches Digital Editions on the Kindle
As 'NYT' Chicago Pages Debut, Local Papers Deliver 'Exclusives'
EXCLUSIVE: Newspaper Sites' Time Spent Dropped in October
UPDATE: AP Layoff Count Hits 90, Meets Goal
'Indy Star' Leads Fight for Lobbying-Laws Reform
Ad Revenue Sees 13th Consecutive Quarter of Decline in Q3
NYT Co. Board Amends Bylaws to Ensure Transparency in Shareholder Nominations
40 Years Ago Today: Photos of My Lai First Appeared But Photographer Often Forgotten

| This week's top stories

    Share on LinkedIn
AP Protests Use of Photo in Controversy
AP Photo/Bob Edme
This August 14, 2005, file photo shows a costumed competitor in a French pig-squealing contest at an agricultural fair. It was circulated this week in a pamphlet purporting to show images offensive to Islam. The photo has no connection with Islam or the caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad published in a Danish newspaper in September. The Associated Press has protested this misleading usage and is demanding that distributors stop circulating it.




Published: February 08, 2006 5:25 PM ET

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) The Associated Press protested Wednesday the misleading inclusion of an AP photograph in a pamphlet purporting to show images offensive to Islam.

The picture shows a bearded man wearing fake pig ears, a pig nose, and a pink embroidered cap on his head. He was wearing the costume while participating in a pig-squealing contest at an annual festival in a farm village in southern France last summer.

The AP sent out the photo describing the pig-squealing contest on Aug. 14, 2005. The photo had no connection with Islam or the caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad published in a Danish newspaper in September.

A blurry, black-and-white copy of the picture was included in a brochure that a delegation of Danish Muslim leaders carried on a Mideast tour to Syria, Lebanon, Egypt and Turkey, in December and January.

"The photograph was taken at an agriculture fair last summer and is totally unrelated to the current controversy," said AP's Director of Photography Santiago Lyon.

Jack Stokes, an AP spokesman, said the picture was used "completely out of context and without permission.

"AP is attempting to contact the distributors of this unrelated photo to protest its misrepresentation and demand that they stop immediately," he said.

The brochure purported to show examples of anti-Muslim images from Europe, said Ahmed Akkari, a spokesman for the group. Included were 12 controversial drawings of the Prophet Muhammad that were published in Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten, he said.

The group received copies of the AP picture in threatening anonymous letters last year, Akkari said.

"We did not find it ourselves," he told the AP, saying he had been unaware of the origin of the photograph and said he believed it was sent to the group as an example of a provocation.

When told about the background of the original AP photo, Akkari said: "I have no comments."


(letters@editorandpublisher.com) Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Back to Advanced Search




Ads by Google