On Thursday, newspapers in Britain did not
publish the images of Queen Elizabeth's grandson naked with an unnamed woman
while on holiday in Las Vegas, following a request from St James's Palace, the official
residence of the prince, through the Press Complaints Commission to respect his
privacy.
But, almost half of the front page of
Friday's Sun newspaper shows a photograph of the naked prince covering up his
genitals with his hands while an apparently naked woman hides behind his back
in a Las Vegas hotel room.
The Sun, part of the British arm of Rupert
Murdoch's News Corp, said millions of people around the world had already seen
the pictures and its readers had a right to see them.
David Dinsmore, managing editor of the Sun,
said in a video on the paper's website that the decision to publish was not
taken lightly, but the issue had become one of "the freedom of the
press."
"This is about the ludicrous situation
where a picture can be seen by hundreds of millions of people around the world
on the Internet but can't be seen in the nation's favorite paper read by eight
million people every day," Dinsmore said.
"This is about our readers getting
involved in the discussion with the man who is third in line to the throne -
it's as simple as that," he said.
Two pictures of the naked prince, who has a
reputation as a partying playboy, were first published on the celebrity gossip
website TMZ on Wednesday.
Their publication has since caused an
ethical dilemma for British editors reeling from a judge-led inquiry into press
conduct.
St James's Palace had contacted the Press
Complaints Commission on Wednesday over concerns about the prince's privacy
being intruded upon, in breach of the editors' code of practice.
"We have made our views on Prince
Harry's privacy known. Newspapers regulate themselves, so the publication of
the photographs is ultimately a decision for editors to make," the BBC
quoted a spokesman for the royal family as saying on Friday.
Thursday's edition of the Sun carried a
mocked up photo using their features picture editor and an intern in place of
Harry -- son of heir-to-the throne Prince Charles and the late Princess Diana
-- and the unnamed woman.
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