Marine
conservation group acquires ship from unsuspecting Japanese authorities through
US firm
guardian.co.uk,
Justin McCurry in Tokyo, Tuesday 11 December 2012
![]() |
| The Sam Simon is named after the Los Angeles-based philanthropist and co-creator of The Simpsons. Photograph: Carolina A Castro/AP |
The marine
conservation group Sea Shepherd has scored a propaganda victory over Japan
after it emerged it had bought its newest anti-whaling vessel from the Japanese
government, apparently without its knowledge.
The $2m
dollar vessel, which previously belonged to the country's meteorological
agency, was bought from unsuspecting Japanese authorities by a US company,
re-registered in the Pacific island of Tuvalu as the New Atlantis, and
delivered to Australia by a Japanese crew.
The ship,
which was unveiled on Tuesday in Hobart, was reflagged to Australia and named
after Sam Simon, the founding producer of The Simpsons TV series and a
prominent animal rights campaigner.
It is the
newest addition to a fleet of four Sea Shepherd vessels that is expected to
pursue Japan's whalers soon after they leave for the Antarctic later this month.
"We
have four ships, one helicopter, drones and more than 120 volunteer crew from
around the world ready to defend majestic whales from the illegal operations of
the Japanese whaling fleet," said Sea Shepherd's founder, Paul Watson.
Watson will
join this season's campaign, operation zero tolerance, despite jumping bail in
German after being placed on an Interpol wanted list for allegedly endangering
a fishing vessel crew in 2002.
To compound
Japan's embarrassment, the 184ft vessel was previously moored in Shimonoseki,
home to the country's Antarctic whaling fleet, after being retired by the
meteorological agency in 2010.
In its past
incarnation as the Seifu Maru, the ice-strengthened vessel's duties included
gathering data on ocean currents for Japan's north Pacific whaling fleet,
according to Sea Shepherd.
The group
has pursued Japan's whalers across the icy waters of the Southern Ocean every
winter since 2005. In February, the whaling fleet was called back to reportearly with just one-fifth of its planned catch following clashes with
activists.
The Sam
Simon's skipper, Lockhart MacLean, said he hoped to intercept the whaling
fleet's factory ship before a single whale was killed. "The goal is to
find the factory ship, the Nisshin Maru, and to pin the bow of this ship on the
stern of that factory ship throughout the duration of the campaign, and send
them home without any whales killed," he told Reuters.
"We're
confident we can seriously impact their whale quota. This year all four of
their harpoon ships are going to be tied up by our four ships, and the goal is
that no harpooning can be done."
Sea
Shepherd's hi-tech powerboat, the Ady Gil, sank after a collision with a Japanese whaling ship in January 2010.
The
International Court of Justice in the Hague is due to rule next year at the
earliest on a move by the Australian government to end Japan's Antarctic
whaling programme.
A clause in
the International Whaling Commission's 1986 ban on commercial whaling allows
Japan to kill almost 1,000 whales each year for what it calls "scientific
research".
The meat is
sold to restaurants and supermarkets, although the public's waning appetite for
the delicacy has created a huge stockpile of unsold produce.
A recent survey
by the International Fund for Animal Welfare found that more than 88% of
Japanese had not bought whale meat in the past 12 months.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.