FACEBOOK has sent a
sickening video showing a newborn baby being tossed around by the head and
dunked into water to law enforcement authorities after being slammed for
keeping it on the site. The
social networking site has said it will remove versions of the disturbing
video if it is being shared by vile people who are encouraging or supporting it
despite originally claiming it had not breached any guidelines.
In a
statement, Facebook said: "Like others, we find the behaviour in this
video upsetting and disturbing. In cases like these, we face a difficult
choice, balancing people's desire to raise awareness of behavior like this
against the disturbing nature of the video. "In
this case, we are removing any reported instances of the video from Facebook
that are shared supporting or encouraging this behaviour. "In
cases where people are raising awareness or condemning the practice, we are
marking reported videos as disturbing, which means they have a warning screen
and are accessible only to people over the age of 18."
Earlier, the head of children's charity NSPCC slammed Facebook for allowing the video to
remain on the site and has written to the government to raise his concerns. In his letter
to minister for internet safety and security, Joanna Shields and culture
minister, Ed Vaizey, Peter Wanless wrote: "We are obviously extremely
concerned for the welfare of the infant and are urging Facebook to offer every
co-operation with the authorities to try and track down this callous individual
and protect the baby. "While
the welfare of this child is naturally paramount, we would also urge you to
look at all available options which will ensure UK citizens, including millions
of children, are no longer exposed to this kind of dreadful and disturbing
content."
The
two-minute clip shows a woman abusing the screaming child as she swings it
around by its limbs as well as shaking the baby while clutching its head. The
child eventually falls silent, fueling fears it may have even died as a
result of the horrifying mistreatment. Unbelievably Facebook
reviewed the clip and ruled it does not violate its standards policy.
In
response to the NSPCC letter, Simon Milner, director of policy at Facebook,
said: "Our judgment is that when this issue is being shared to draw
attention to it and condemn what is happening and ideally to try and help this
child, then yes, there is a place for it on Facebook. "If
it was being shared to praise it or to make fun of it, absolutely not and we
will take it down," he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.
Gabrielle
Shaw, CEO for the National Association for People Abused in Childhood, said:
"It is actually staggering that it does not breach the terms of Facebook. "We
are of course aware of free speech but surely this is an image of shocking
abuse and we would look to Facebook to at the very least take this down and
investigate."
The
clip was posted online last week and is believed to have originated in
Indonesia. It
shows
the baby being suspended in a bucket of water in a kitchen by a woman
whose face can't be seen while they are being filmed by another person. Initially
the baby screams loudly as it is hung by its arms, with the adult sharply
pulling its little arms out of joint. Then the abuser pulls the baby's arms
even higher by holding them in one hand, while she swings it round and round,
its head repeatedly flopping side to side.
She
then hangs it upside down high in the air by its legs, and then swings it by
the head by holding its cheeks, before it chillingly stops crying. The
baby appears to go floppy, but she continues to swing it around in the water as
she twists its little limbs.
It was reported to
Facebook on Wednesday on the grounds of promoting graphic violence and
then for nudity.
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