AFP, Sydney, 30 January
2013
Anti-whaling
activist group Sea Shepherd said Wednesday it had intercepted the Japanese
fleet in its annual Southern Ocean hunt "before a single harpoon has been
fired".
Sea
Shepherd claims to have saved the lives of 4,000 whales over the past eight
whaling seasons with ever-greater campaigns of harassment against the Japanese
harpoon fleet.
The
militant environmentalist group said the Brigitte Bardot, a former ocean racer,
had intercepted the harpoon ship Yushin Maru No. 3 in the Southern Ocean at a
relatively northern latitude.
"Given
that the large concentrations of whales are found further south, closer to the
Antarctic continent where there are high concentrations of krill, this would
indicate that they have not yet begun whaling," said Brigitte Bardot
captain Jean Yves Terlain.
Former
Australian politician Bob Brown, who assumed leadership of the anti-whaling
campaign from fugitive Sea Shepherd founder Paul Watson due to legal issues
earlier this month, said it was welcome news.
"It is
likely that we have intercepted these whale poachers before a single harpoon
has been fired," said Brown.
Crew
members of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, look at the Brigitte Bardot
ship, on May 25, 2011 in La Ciotat, France. Anti-whaling activist group Sea
Shepherd said Wednesday it had intercepted the Japanese fleet in its annual
Southern Ocean hunt "before a single harpoon has been fired".
Watson is
wanted by Interpol after skipping bail last July in Germany, where he was
arrested on Costa Rican charges relating to a high-seas confrontation over
shark finning in 2002.
He is on
board Sea Shepherd's main ship, Steve Irwin, but has stepped down as skipper
and has vowed to abide by a US court ruling in December banning the group from
physically confronting any vessel in the Japanese fleet.
The ruling
by the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit requires Sea Shepherd to stay
at least 500 yards (metres) from whaling vessels and prohibits "navigating
in a manner that is likely to endanger the safe navigation of any such
vessel".
The whaling
fleet left Japan for the Southern Ocean in late December, planning to catch up
to 935 Antarctic minke whales and up to 50 fin whales.
Tokyo
claims it catches whales for scientific research -- a loophole in the
international ban on whaling -- but makes no secret of the fact that they
ultimately end up on dinner plates.
Sea
Shepherd's campaign this year is its biggest yet, involving four ships, a
helicopter, three drones and more than 100 crew members.


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