Shelton began her career in 2005 in Cambodia, freelancing and later working for
The Phnom Penh Post,
Post Khmer and
Seven Days magazine. She was on assignment in Iraq when she moved to Libya to cover the civil war. She was tied and brutally beaten in her hotel room in
Benghazi during a robbery and attempted kidnapping, from which she escaped by jumping to another balcony. She later obtained exclusive video of the death of
Muammar Gaddafi. In September 2012, Shelton was reporting on rebel fighters near the front lines in Aleppo. Shortly after a warning that a Syrian tank was near, Shelton filmed a
shell impact as it exploded nearby, killing three of the four rebels at the position. Images and accounts of the encounter and Shelton's reporting style were widely redistributed by traditional news sites as well as social media. In her account of the incident, Shelton said, "I was covered in the dust and debris; it started really coming down. So I ran back a bit, and we stood back behind this cloud and were waiting for these guys, the guys to come running through.... and no one came." Shelton was presented with the
George Polk Award for Video Reporting by
Carl Bernstein for a series of video reports on Aleppo, Syria throughout 2012. Bernstein remarked that Shelton had communicated "the human tragedy of the conflict in Syria in a way that is impossible to ignore or forget. Through powerful video, viscerally engaging images and authoritative writing, she gave voice and face to those most affected by the civil war." Shelton has since received 19 international awards and accolades for her work including a
Peabody,
POYi Pictures of the Year International Award of Excellence in Multimedia and the Media Award presented by the
International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation for broadcast news and articles on complex trauma and incestuous child abuse. Shelton works for the
Australian Broadcasting Corporation as a Middle East expert in the
Asia Pacific newsroom. ==Sunrise Cambodia==