Sea
Shepherd activist Erwin Vermeulen has been released from a Japanese prison.
| Erwin Vermeulen (Photo: Sea Shepherd) |
The Dutch
environmentalist was arrested last December while he was respresenting Sea
Shepherd as a ‘cove guardian’ in Taiji during the annual dolphin drives.
Vermeulen was allegedly involved in a pushing incident while trying to
photograph the dolphins.
The public
prosecutor has appealed the court’s verdict, which freed Vermeulen and ordered
him to pay a fine of some 1,000 euros. Pending the decision of an appeals
court, the Dutchman is not allowed to leave Japan.
Sea
Shepherd is considering launching proceedings against the Japanese state for
holding Vermeulen for two months in a case which is minor enough to warrant a
small fine – should that also be the outcome of the appeals court.
The
bloodiness of the dolphin drives around the village of Taiji was first
highlighted by Sea Shepherd in 2003. Since then, the organization has appointed
‘cove guardians’ to monitor the hunters’ activities.
US judge
denies preliminary injunction to whalers
In a
separate court case in the US on Thursday, a judge refused to restrain the US
Sea Shepherd group from disrupting the activities of Japanese whalers,
allegedly with violence.
Japanese
whalers sought a court order preventing the Sea Shepherd and its founder Paul
Watson "from engaging in physical attacks on plaintiffs' vessels in the
Southern Ocean," referring to the ocean encircling Antarctica.
Last month
Japan's Fisheries Agency said anti-whaling activists threw paint and foul
smelling acid at a whaling
ship in the Antarctic ocean in a fresh bid to halt the annual hunt, officials
said.
Two boats
belonging to Sea Shepherd approached the Japanese whaling vessel Yushin Maru
No. 2 (YS2) - which was seen leaving the
Japanese port of Shimonoseki for the annual hunt - and launched 40 bottles
containing paint and butyric acid, the agency said.
The
fisheries agency’s mission is officially said to be for "scientific
research," with the fleet aiming to catch around 900 minke and fin whales,
according to a plan submitted by the government to the International Whaling
Commission.
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