Literature
'Baby yoga' video on Facebook draws activists' ire
London, June 6
A two-minute video clip on
Facebook of a screaming baby being roughly and repeatedly plunged in a
bucket of water has left child rights activists fuming.
The film
showed a woman in a kitchen, believed to be in Indonesia, repeatedly
ducking a crying young baby into a tub of water, while holding the child
upside down.
The video spread around the world, with some people
claiming it was an example of "baby yoga". But child rights activists,
notably England's leading charity National Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Children (NSPCC), cried it was clear abuse.
"What is
one person's baby yoga in one cultural context is child abuse in another
context," Claire Lilley from NSPCC was quoted as saying by The
Guardian.
"The baby is flung about in a very violent way which
could cause serious damage to its brain and its limbs. We just don't
think it's appropriate for that to be so easily viewable," Lilley added.
The NSPCC called on the government to intervene to help safeguard children on social networks.
As the outrage grew, the video was taken down, possibly by the person who originally posted it.
Facebook
had earlier defended its decision not to censor the film, saying it did
not break its rules and that to take it down would also mean the site
had to ban videos of brutality during the Arab spring or depicting
animal cruelty.
"Like others, we find the behaviour in this video
upsetting and disturbing. We face a difficult choice: balancing
people's desire to raise awareness of behaviour like this against the
disturbing nature of the video," a Facebook spokesman was quoted as
saying.
NSPCC chief executive Peter Wanless said the case raised a broader, more serious issue.
"We
have now reached the long overdue point where it is time for social
networking sites to be held to account for the content on their sites
and pay more attention to their safeguarding duties to protect children
and young people, whether they are viewing the content or appearing in
it," he was quoted as saying.