The Australian War Memorial chair, Kim Beazley, said on Friday that the federal court ruling involved “a civil legal case” and was “one step in a longer process”.
“Collection items relating to Ben Roberts-Smith VC MG, including his uniform, equipment, medals and associated art works, are on display in the memorial’s galleries,” he said in a statement on behalf of the Australian War Memorial council.
“We are considering carefully the additional content and context to be included in these displays.
“The memorial acknowledges Afghanistan veterans and their families who may be affected at this time.”
Beazley, a former Labor leader and defence minister, said the memorial “assists in remembering, interpreting and understanding Australia’s experience of war and its enduring impact”.
He said that included “the causes, conduct and consequences of war”.
In a
landmark defamation case ruling on Thursday, Justice Anthony Besanko found that, on the balance of probabilities, Roberts-Smith kicked a handcuffed prisoner off a cliff in Darwan in 2012 before ordering a subordinate Australian soldier to shoot the injured man dead.
Besanko also found that in 2009 Roberts-Smith ordered the execution of an elderly man found hiding in a tunnel in a bombed-out compound codenamed “Whiskey 108”, as well as murdering a disabled man with a prosthetic leg during the same mission, using a light machine gun.
Kim Beazley says AWM acknowledges gravity of defamation decision amid calls to remove exhibits
www.theguardian.com