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Tories forced to pull Jeremy Corbyn attack video due to breach of copyright

Video contained footage belonging to private YouTube user

Matt Dathan
Tuesday 15 September 2015 19:50 BST
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Labour MP Jeremy Corbyn speaking to protesters at the anti-austerity march in London at the weekend.
Labour MP Jeremy Corbyn speaking to protesters at the anti-austerity march in London at the weekend. (Getty)

The Tories have been forced to pull their Jeremy Corbyn attack video due to a breach of copyright.

The video showed footage of the new Labour leader's controversial comments on a range of topics before warning that the prospect of him in Downing Street was a "threat to Britain's security".

It shows black and white images and clips of Mr Corbyn followed by stark warnings, set to sinister music and a black backdrop.

The video was released early on Monday morning amid the chaos of Mr Corbyn's first shadow cabinet appointments.

It highlighted comments that emerged last month of him describing Osama bin Laden's death as a "tragedy", widely-covered remarks calling Hezbollah and Hamas "friends" and plays footage of Mr Corbyn saying he wanted to "surrender our nuclear defences" and "dismantle our Armed Forces".

The video begins with a simple warning about the new Labour leader (Conservative party)

The video has been pulled from YouTube, but the video posted on the Conservative party's Facebook page appears to have edited out the footage relating to the copyright dispute. It has received more than 700,000 views.

It was footage showing him calling for Nato to be scrapped that was the subject of a copyright claim. The footage belongs to YouTube user Adrian Cousins, who took the video of Mr Corbyn speaking at the Dangerous Times festival in 2014:

A tweet sent out by David Cameron containing the same warning to Britain's national security was criticised by the Russian embassy to London.

In a post on Twitter, the embassy suggested that were Russian President Vladimir Putin to accuse a leading opposition party a "threat to national security" it would generate a backlash in the UK media.

The Conservative party is yet to respond to a request for comment.

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