Body in ad ‘unlikely to offend’
A complaint about a poster in Auckland which featured the dead body of Russian ambassador Andrey Karlov was not upheld by the Advertising Standards Authority.
The poster, which advertised the World Press Photo Exhibition, depicted the assassination of Karlov by an off-duty Turkish police officer at an art gallery in Ankara, Turkey.
The photo of the assassination was the winner of the World Press Photo of the year.
The complainant said the advertisement was “a gruesome visual representation of real-life events”.
“These are not actors being depicted — these are real-life people in a real-life event,” the complainant said. “I believe this advertisement promotes extremism, terrorism and violence and it is well beyond any ethical norms.”
In response, the agency behind the poster argued the image had already been widely viewed across the world. They said the photo was also used in promotions for the exhibition in 100 cities and 45 countries around the world.
“We did not select this photo with any intent to promote indecency, offensiveness, violence or a disregard for safety. It was selected because it is the winning exhibition image,” the agency said.
The majority of the complaints board at the Advertising Standard Authority did not accept that the advertisement could lend support to violent behaviour and felt it “was unlikely to cause serious and widespread offence”.
A minority argued the poster was in fact likely to cause serious and widespread offence, and “more care should have been taken to ensure it was not exposed to such a wide audience considering the graphic, real-life violence”.
The majority ruling meant the complaint was not upheld.