Forty years ago a single photograph of a nine-year-old girl, her body scarred by napalm, helped swell opposition to the Vietnam war. The US-made product, a thickening agent mixed with petroleum or other fuel, and reaching temperatures of 1,200 degrees Celcius, was used as a weapon during the war. The
Associated Press photograph of Kim Phuc Phan Ti, who became known as
the 'napalm girl' showed how the chemical burned its victims to the
bone. Kim survived and, still bearing the scars of war, she now resides near Toronto where she is a UNESCO ambassador and an activist for the youngest victims of wars. Al Jazeera's Daniel Lak reports from Toronto.
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