This Article is From Apr 16, 2021

Controversy Over Video Of Dancers Twerking At Australian Military Event

A troupe of dancers performed at the commissioning ceremony of the HMAS Supply

Controversy Over Video Of Dancers Twerking At Australian Military Event

Footage of dancers at an Australian Navy event has created a controversy.

Footage of dancers twerking at an Australian military event has created a huge buzz in the country, with the Royal Australian Navy facing criticism over the dance performance that many deemed "inappropriate". A troupe of dancers performed at the commissioning ceremony of the HMAS Supply, a new $2 billion navy ship, in Sydney on April 10, reports The Week. Footage of the dancers twerking, thrusting and gyrating surfaced on social media Wednesday and quickly went viral. 

The video shows a group of seven women dancers dressed in black shorts and red tops, dancing in front of the HMAS Supply vessel. The dance performance at an official military event raised eyebrows. According to the BBC, conservative lawmakers led the chorus of voices criticising the dance, while tabloids in Australia called it a fall in military standards. 

Philip Thompson, the MP representing Herbert in Queensland, questioned the need of having dancers at an official event and said, "Standards in the ADF, and definitely when commissioning a ship, should be a little bit higher than that."

Reactions to the video on social media varied from outraged to amused

What started as criticism of the performance, however, has now spiraled into a story about inaccurate media coverage after it emerged that a clip of the performance had been wrongly edited by the national broadcaster, the ABC. 

The ABC shared a video of the performance on Twitter which cut between shots of the dancers and reactions from officials and dignitaries attending the event. However, the Navy said none of the officials or dignitaries had seen the performance. Governor-General David Hurley had not arrived at the time of the routine, the Navy said. 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said he was "disappointed" at the misreporting. "I think standards have failed and so I think obviously defence will look at these matters and make what changes they wish to in the future," he said, according to The Guardian

The ABC issued an apology for the way the video was edited. "The video should not have been edited in that way and the ABC apologises to the Governor-General and the Chief of Navy, and to viewers, for this error," the broadcaster said in a statement. 
 

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