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Phan Thị Kim Phúc OOnt (Vietnamese pronunciation: [faːŋ tʰɪ̂ˀ kim fúk͡p̚]; born April 6, 1963), referred to informally as the girl in the picture [1] and the napalm girl, is a South Vietnamese-born Canadian woman best known as the nine-year-old child depicted in the Pulitzer Prize–winning photograph, titled The Terror of War ...
2 paź 2005 · Since the ceremony at the Wall, Plummer, a 50-year-old Methodist minister in rural Purcellville, Va., has revised his tale, though continuing to exaggerate it. Appearing on ABC'S Nightline in...
12 lis 1996 · It is one of the most enduring and painful images of the Vietnam War: 9-year-old Phan Thi Kim Phuc running naked toward the lens of a camera, holding her arms outstretched and screaming in...
Phan Thi Kim Phuc Oont, known as Kim Phuc, is the little girl at the forefront of the famous photograph. Kim, just nine years old, is naked, arms thrown out in agony, her face caught in an...
20 lut 1997 · "I was free," Plummer said. "I was flying. I was finally at peace." CAPTION: Phan Thi Kim Phuc, a napalm victim in 1972, has a Veterans Day meeting with John Plummer, who ordered the attack.
On June 8, 1972, John Plummer ordered an airstrike on a South Vietnamese village. When the napalm hit, 9-year-old Pham Thi Kim Phuc was hiding in a pagoda. She ran, naked and screaming, from her village.
17 mar 2003 · A documentary by Canadian independent film-maker Shelley Saywell, airing on the CBC series Witness on Feb. 11, captures an unanticipated and emotional meeting with Capt. John Plummer, the man who ordered South Vietnamese pilots to make the fateful air strike on her village.