
Activists and community organisations have told the ABC not to accede to a聽聽request for video footage of climate protesters.
鈥淎larming overreach鈥 is how more than 40 civil society organisations, including Amnesty International, Human Rights Law Centre and the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance (MEAA) have described it.
In a climate emergency, it is hardly surprising Woodside is under the spotlight. Rather than tackle the problem, most states are enacting laws to聽肠谤补肠办听诲辞飞苍听辞苍听肠濒颈尘补迟别听辫谤辞迟别蝉迟别谤蝉. Unfortunately, it appears the national broadcaster is helping.
The ABC鈥檚聽Four Corners聽filmed a handful of protesters outside聽Woodside boss Meg O鈥橬eil鈥檚聽house in August. They did not enter her house, but a mainstream media-inspired furore ensued. Several people were arrested, with Four Corners covering these in聽.
Woodside鈥檚 controversial Burrup Hub consists of聽the Scarborough and Browse Basin gas fields, the Pluto Project processing plant and liquified gas and fertiliser plans in the Pilbara region.
The MEAA聽聽the ABC not to hand its footage over, saying the request was a 鈥渄irect threat to press freedom鈥. MEAA federal president Karen Percy said it 鈥渞ides roughshod over the obligation of a journalist to protect its sources鈥.
WA police also complained about the Four Corners journalists, with WA Police Minister Paul Papalia聽聽they should have notified police about the protesters鈥 plans.
Disrupt Burrup Hub, which organised the action,聽聽on October 26 that the ABC had agreed to hand over the footage. It criticised the broadcaster saying it breached basic media ethics and jeopardized public interest journalism 鈥渂y degrading trust in the ABC鈥.
Ballardong Noongar man Desmond Blurton, Disrupt Burrup Hub campaigner and deputy chair of the Deaths in Custody Watch Committee, who was filmed as part of the聽Four Corners聽program said he did not consent to have footage of himself handed to police.
鈥淎s a First Nations justice campaigner 鈥 I am deeply concerned that the ABC may cause the imprisonment of vulnerable people by surrendering source material to the police 鈥 if the ABC hands over any footage it will be a deep betrayal.鈥
Disrupt Burrup Hub media advisor Jesse Noakes, who faces trial on November 6 for refusing to hand over the footage, said he was told by the ABC before the action that sources would not be identified. This was 鈥渁 precondition for their participation鈥.
鈥淚f the ABC release聽Four Corners聽footage to WA police, who would ever trust the ABC to tell their story again?鈥
ABC聽journalists took action outside ABC offices on October 26 in Boorloo/Perth, Naarm/Melbourne and Gadi/Sydney demanding it not release the footage.
ABC managing director David Anderson claimed the broadcaster 鈥渘ever have and never will鈥 reveal its sources, but he also told Senate Estimates that he was negotiating with the police.
Surely the national broadcaster can see the real story here: government policy is helping deliver more catastrophic climate change and聽protesters are being criminalised.
The ABC should be helping climate activists, not helping the state criminalise them.
If the ABC has, or intends to, hand over the some or all of the footage, any remaining trust in the national broadcaster 鈥 especially by young people 鈥 will evaporate.
This sorry tale is a reminder that we need independent media more than ever.聽一品探花, the independent, ecosocialist media project, is committed to providing an alternative that supports, not undermines, movements for change and justice.
一品探花 has been a part of building the climate movement for more than 30 years and this has only been possible because of our supporters. You can聽become聽one from only $5 a month or聽尘补办别听补听诲辞苍补迟颈辞苍聽to the 2023 Fighting Fund.