Whistleblower website Sarawak Report reported yesterday that
the BBC was looking into claims that Astro had doctored one of its news
reports on the Bersih 3.0 rally last Saturday.
It highlighted a video uploaded to YouTube comparing the original BBC broadcast and the allegedly censored version shown on Astro.
In its posting, the site details that up to 30 seconds of footage from the report had been removed when aired on Astro.
"Thirty seconds appears to have been cut out of the doctored version on
Astro, after the removal of three separate sequences, one which showed a
policeman on a motorbike apparently firing at demonstrators.
"The two other sequences that were removed included interviews with
demonstrators, explaining why they felt they had to take to the streets
to defend the right to fair elections," it said in the article.
The
website reports that the BBC issued a statement after being alerted by
the website, clarifying that "urgent enquiries" were being made into the
matter in order to "establish the facts".
"During the week of World Press Freedom Day, it would be deplorable if
access to independent and impartial news was being prevented in any
way," said the statement.
Astro has apparently yet to respond to the BBC on the matter.
The report was included in BBC World, one of the channels available in
Astro. BBC reporter Emily Buchanan produced the two-minute report
covering the Bersih rally, according to the website.
Sarawak Report
also claims that the quality of the editing present in the report
broadcasted on Astro indicated it was professional work, suggesting that
the cuts were a deliberate effort to cast the Malaysian authorities in
better light.
In addition, the report claims that an Al Jazeera report broadcasted on Astro was also tampered with, but did not elaborate on what edits were made.
Astro is the only satellite channel licensed by the federal government
and is owned by tycoon Ananda Krishnan, who is said to have close links
with Umno.
Sarawak Report was founded by investigative journalist Clare Rewcastle Brown, sister-in-law to former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown.
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