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Corrections & Clarifications

Imran Khan

News Channel: On January 20 the ABC News channel incorrectly identified Imran Khan as the former prime minister of India. He is the former prime minister of Pakistan.

Port of Hastings Decision

News: On January 22 a story reported the federal government’s rejection of a proposal for the Victorian Renewable Energy Terminal at the Port of Hastings was a rejection of a related offshore wind project. This was incorrect and has since been amended.

Cashless gaming trial

Weekend Breakfast: On 18 November 2023, Weekend Breakfast conducted an interview with Fairfield City Mayor Frank Carbone, who said NSW Premier Chris Minns did not take on board the Crime Commission's recommendations in relation to cashless gaming. The program should have mentioned that in July 2023, the NSW Government announced the establishment of an Independent Panel on Gaming Reform which will oversee a cashless gaming trial on electronic gaming machines in a range of venues across NSW, including clubs.

Brittany Higgins' partner

News Channel: On 22 December, in a live cross on the News Channel's morning program, reporter Elizabeth Byrne mistakenly referred to Brittany Higgins' partner as Bruce Lehrmann when mentioning Ms Higgins had moved to France with her partner. Ms Byrne is an accomplished court reporter and it was a slip of the tongue in a live television situation. Ms Byrne meant to say Ms Higgins had moved to France with her partner David Sharaz.

BDS

TikTok: On 20 December a video was posted profiling a supporter of the BDS (Boycott, Divest, Sanction) movement in Sydney. The spread of the BDS movement is a legitimate story for the ABC to do on any platform. However, the story required more context on the opposition to BDS, which has now been included.

Bruce Lehrmann

On 9 February 2022, the ABC published a National Press Club of Australia address by Brittany Higgins and Grace Tame. Bruce Lehrmann commenced defamation proceedings against the ABC, claiming that the broadcast of the National Press Club of Australia address accused him of sexually assaulting Brittany Higgins. These proceedings were settled on terms satisfactory to Mr Lehrmann and the ABC including discontinuance of the proceedings. The ABC notes that a criminal charge of sexual assault brought against Mr Lehrmann in the ACT was later dropped. The ABC does not suggest that he was guilty of that charge.

Sky News captions

Media Watch: On 2 October Media Watch broadcast a story about Michael Pezzullo. The story featured several examples of Mr Pezzullo's name being miscaptioned in auto-generated captions, which it said occurred "on Sky News". In fact, the miscaptioning occurred in several Sky News videos published on the MSN website. The same errors did not occur in the broadcast versions of the same content, or on the Sky News website. Media Watch should have attributed the errors to MSN, not Sky News. Note: An earlier version of this correction stated that the miscaptioned videos had been published on the Sky News website. This was incorrect.
Updated

Detention centre footage

News: On 9 November TV News at 7pm, a story was broadcast about a High Court ruling set to end indefinite detention for some asylum seekers. Due to a production error, incorrect footage was inadvertently included of a high school rather than a detention centre. ABC News apologises for the error.

Al Shifa hospital footage

News: On 15 November TV News at 7pm, the News Channel and The World broadcast a story about Israeli military operations at al Shifa hospital in Gaza. Due to a production error, incorrect footage was inadvertently included of a hospital incident in Egypt ten years prior. ABC News apologises for the error.
Updated

SunPork Fresh Foods

News: On 9 November 2023, ABC News published an online article reporting that the Australian Council of Trade Unions had commissioned an inquiry into price gouging by banks, insurance companies, supermarkets and energy providers which heard from residents in Cape York that they were paying nearly $100 for a leg of ham. The online article included a picture of a SunPork Fresh Food half leg of ham. The Article did not say, and the ABC did not intend to convey by including that picture, that SunPork had engaged in price gouging or any other improper behaviour. If any reader understood otherwise, the ABC unreservedly withdraws such an inference.

Don Pratt Correction

News: A report of proceedings in Mt Gambier Magistrate’s Court published on ABC News Online and broadcast on ABC radio on October 31st and November 1st incorrectly identified the accused Donald Jeffrey Pratt, 51 of Mt Gambier, as the owner of the Confession café in Mount Gambier. Mr Pratt is a worker at the café. The story also incorrectly described Mr Pratt’s charges. Mr Pratt’s proceeding in fact related to a charge of communicating to make a child amenable to sexual activity.  The ABC apologises for these errors. 
Updated

White echidna

News: On the 7pm News on 25 October, a white echidna was referred to as a marsupial. Echidnas are in fact monotremes, not marsupials.

1967 Referendum (2)

News: On the 7pm News in NSW on October 12 it was stated that the 1967 Referendum granted Indigenous Australians the right to vote. That is not correct, the referendum approved a change to constitution to omit ‘words relating to the people of the Aboriginal race in any state and so that Aboriginals are to be counted in reckoning the population'.

Goals scored for Australia in soccer

News: ABC TV News: On 4 October, a television news report contained an error, stating that Tim Cahill is the all-time top goal-scorer for Australia. This is incorrect, as the top goal scorer is Samantha Kerr
Updated

Same sex marriage postal survey

News: An online story published on 25 September has been updated to change a reference to the same-sex marriage plebiscite to a postal survey.

Taipan grounding

ABC TV News: On 29 September, a television news report about the permanent grounding of the Defence Force’s Taipan helicopter fleet contained an error, in referring to a fatal crash in the Whitsundays in January. The crash happened in July.

Tasmania and Queensland regional populations

News: On September 19 ABC TV News broadcast a story in which the reporter stated that Queensland is "the only Australian state where more people live outside the capital city". That is also true of Tasmania where less than half the population live in Hobart.
Updated

Voice debate in Question Time

News Channel: On 12 September, a live cross on the ABC News channel stated Opposition Leader Peter Dutton sought to suspend standing orders in the House of Representatives following an answer from the Minister for Indigenous Australians Linda Burney. This is incorrect. The Opposition Leader asked a question following an answer from the Minister, which then led to points of order being raised.

Laptops and airport security

News: An online story published on 17 July on airport security said X-ray backscatter technology is widely used in US airports, when in fact it is no longer used. This has been corrected. An incorrect reference to CT scans has also been removed.

Mammograms for breast cancer

News: An online story published on 19 August on eligibility for free mammograms has been edited to make clear that the free screening program available to Australians aged over 40 only applies to those without symptoms of breast cancer.

Flora and Fauna myth

The Drum: On August 14 the program included a news clip of Adam Goodes stating that stated Indigenous people were once governed by the flora and fauna act. This is inaccurate – Indigenous people in Australia have never been covered by a flora and fauna act.

1967 Referendum and Indigenous servicemen

Newsradio, News Breakfast and Online News: A story on August 17 about First Nations men who served during the Vietnam War being added to the Australian War Memorial's official history included a line that incorrectly stated Indigenous men were exempt from army conscription in 1973 because Aboriginal people were governed by the flora and fauna act. This is inaccurate – Indigenous people in Australia have never been covered by a flora and fauna act. The 1967 referendum changed the Constitution to allow Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples to be counted as part of the population and the Commonwealth to make laws for them.
Updated

Electric Vehicles

RN: In the August 7 episode of Counterpoint, the presenter referred to a video featuring two electric vehicles in an explosive collision. That video has subsequently proved to be fake and experts confirm that while lithium batteries do release heat when compromised there is no evidence that they could explode in this fashion.

Voice AI Videos

Insiders: On the program broadcast on Sunday, August 6, panellist John Paul Janke described the use of AI generated videos by some opponents of the Indigenous Voice to Parliament. The ABC wishes to clarify that the campaign coordinated by Warren Mundine and Jacinta Nampijinpa Price - Australians for Unity, is not affiliated with the videos being referred to.

Northern Land Council

News Online: On 4 August an article about the Garma Festival stated that Djawa Yunupiŋu was expected to be announced as the new chairman of the Northern Land Council. This statement was incorrect and has been removed.

Welcome to the ABC's corrections and clarifications page.

The ABC is committed to delivering content that engages, informs and entertains.

We are also committed to upholding our editorial standards, including accuracy, impartiality and independence.

That means if mistakes are made, we aim to correct or clarify them quickly and transparently.

We always aim to provide these corrections or clarifications on the enduring record for the content — ie, on the program webpage or the online news story.

Where there is no enduring record, or where the correction or clarification is considered significant, an entry will be made on this page.

This page lists relevant corrections and clarifications made to ABC content across our radio, television and digital platforms, whether as a result of complaints or for any other reason.

Wherever possible, we will also provide links to the content itself, so you can see the original material and the changes that have been made.

For more information about each item, simply click on the headline.