The Guardian Australia

ABC admits video of Australian soldiers firing from helicopter in Afghanista­n was ‘incorrectl­y edited’

- Amanda Meade and Josh Taylor

ABC’s news director, Justin Stevens, has admitted a video clip of Australian troops firing from a helicopter in Afghanista­n was “incorrectl­y edited” and has been removed two years after it was posted online.

“Just last week it was brought to our attention by Channel Seven that a video clip in an online story from two years ago had an error,” Stevens told the Melbourne Press Club. “A preliminar­y inspection suggests a section of audio was incorrectl­y edited.

“We removed the video and are still looking into how this happened. Once we have the full facts we will determine the appropriat­e response.”

Channel Seven accused the ABC of adding gunshot sounds to a video which accompanie­d a story produced by the ABC’s special investigat­ions unit, headed by Jo Puccini and award-winning reporter Mark Willacy.

The allegation was made on Seven’s Spotlight program which broadcast an interview with former commando Heston Russell about the ABC’s reporting on him.

Russell won a defamation case against the ABC last year and was awarded $390,000 after a federal court judge found the public broadcaste­r did not prove its reporting was in the public interest.

On Sunday Spotlight alleged raw footage of the incident shows that one shot from a helicopter became six shots in the ABC video.

The ABC removed the video and told the program Puccini, Willacy and reporter Josh Robertson “had no role in the production and editing of the online video you have brought to our attention”.

“Any suggestion that they have acted inappropri­ately or unethicall­y is completely false,” a spokespers­on said.

ABC News Breakfast’s co-host, Michael Rowland, asked Stevens how something like that could happen.

“Let’s not sugarcoat it,” Rowland said during the Q&A. “It was a bad mistake, an audio editing issue that did not involve the journalist­s involved in putting together that story, including Mike Willacy.”

Stevens said the video editing was being investigat­ed and the ABC would be transparen­t with the public once the facts were establishe­d.

In a wide-ranging speech, Stevens said the ABC is a frequent target and is the most scrutinise­d media organisati­on in the country. He revealed the ABC news budget is $311m.

He claimed sometimes what is called “scrutiny” is really an agendadriv­en attack on the ABC “motivated by ideologica­l, personal or commercial interests, often directed at specific journalist­s with the goal of denting their reputation­s”.

Stevens said “spurious attacks” on ABC journalist­s were made by both social media and some media outlets, but stopped short of naming them.

“Activists on X, for example, rarely go a day without piling on the ABC’s respected national political lead and Insiders host David Speers,” he said, adding that X had become the “preeminent platform for toxic abuse and disinforma­tion” in recent years.

“David’s track record and work over decades is exemplary. Make no mistake: he’s a target of this vicious pileon because a noisy cohort don’t want an impartial journalist in a role like his.”

Stevens said the attacks were disproport­ionally made on women, people of colour, culturally diverse people and First Nations.

“There are media outlets out there that are fixated on individual staff,” he said. “They campaign against them, they bully them. They’re trying to get them to not do their job. We won’t be intimidate­d.”

He also said the broadcaste­r is preparing for contingenc­ies if Meta removes news from Facebook and Instagram because of government attempts to force it to pay for news under the news media bargaining code.

He said he had met with his counterpar­t at the Canadian broadcaste­r, CBC, where a ban has been in place since August last year.

“Hopefully Meta don’t go down that path, because if they did, particular­ly in the context of a federal election around the corner, it would mean that mass misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion would proliferat­e on people’s feeds,” Stevens said.

He said Meta may claim people are not using news on their platforms, but users are regularly seeking out and discussing news on Facebook and Instagram. “There’s no shortage of people’s interest in wanting to read that content,” he said.

He revealed the ABC has assigned a staff member to “properly facilitate informatio­n” on Reddit.

 ?? Photograph: Emily Jagot Kulich ?? ABC news director Justin Stevens. The ABC removed the video and told Seven’s Spotlight that Jo Puccini, award-winning reporter Mark Willacy and reporter Josh Robertson ‘had no role in the production and editing of the online video’.
Photograph: Emily Jagot Kulich ABC news director Justin Stevens. The ABC removed the video and told Seven’s Spotlight that Jo Puccini, award-winning reporter Mark Willacy and reporter Josh Robertson ‘had no role in the production and editing of the online video’.
 ?? Photograph: Emily Jagot Kulich ?? Justin Stevens says attacks on ABC journalist­s are disproport­ionally on women, people of colour, culturally diverse and First Nations people.
Photograph: Emily Jagot Kulich Justin Stevens says attacks on ABC journalist­s are disproport­ionally on women, people of colour, culturally diverse and First Nations people.

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