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Vietnamese photojournalist Doan Cong Tinh is apologizing for a Photoshopped Vietnam War photo that he �mistakenly� sent out and had published in an international exhibition.
Thanh Nien Daily reports that the photo showed North Vietnamese soldiers climbing a rope near a waterfall in 1970.
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It was on display last year at the International Photojournalism Festival of Perpignan (Visa pour l�image Perpignan) in France, and then later published in an online gallery by the New York Times.
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Questions about the photograph were first raised by Danish photographer Jorn Stjerneklar, who paid a visit to the 72-year-old Tinh back in April.
Tinh showing Stjerneklar the photo in a book earlier this year.
In a blog post, Stjerneklar writes that he was stunned when Tinh showed him a photo book of his that contained a noticeably different version of the photo:
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Here�s what the old and new versions look like side-by-side:
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Notice how the waterfall in the new version is completely different, and how one of the soldiers in the frame was removed from the shot entirely.
�I asked C�ng why he had changed the image so much,� Stjerneklar says. �He looked down and mumbled that the negative was damaged so it had to be fixed. I was at that moment really in another world.�
The New York Times quickly responded by taking down the photo and posting an update, saying that �This kind of composite does not conform to The Times�s journalistic standards, and would not have been published if editors were aware of the manipulation.�
In an interview with the news site VnExpress, Tinh says that the original waterfall was �too bright,� and that after the negative was damaged, he brought the shot to a photo store that helped him repair and Photoshop it. Furthermore, he claims that he didn�t send the new photo to exhibitions due to its Photoshopped nature, but accidentally included it on a CD that was provided to the organizer of the Visa pour l�image.
Tinh says he�s sorry about the controversy that has transpired, and says this whole thing has been a big learning experience for him. Stjerneklar writes that he doesn�t blame Tinh for the happened due to the prevalence of propaganda at the time, but he wonders why �the two most respected institutions for documentary photography� were unable to verify the trustworthiness of the shot and are now both �tarred� as a result.
(via The Click)
P.S. You may notice that even the �original� version shows evidence of Photoshopping � there�s a repeating pattern in the waterfall.

Started out doing photography at the age of 6 using an uncle's old 1940 kodak brownie box camera. At 15 years of age, I decided to buy my very own 1975 Praktica SLR camera. I now shoot with a Nikon D850. I do unpaid TFP and commercial paid work.