Google – AFP, 18 December 2013
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The Sea
Shepherd ship Bob Barker (R) and the Japanese whaling fleet fuel
tanker the San
Laurel collide in icy waters off Antarctica, February 25, 2013
(Institute Of
Cetacean Research/AFP/File)
|
Sydney —
Sea Shepherd campaigners left for their tenth annual campaign to prevent
Japan's slaughter of whales in the Southern Ocean on Wednesday, with three
vessels departing Australia for Antarctic waters.
The Bob
Barker, which was once a Norwegian to harass the Japanese fleet as they harpoon
the giant animals, and prevent them from taking their full quota.
Captain
Peter Hammarstedt said it was his ninth campaign protecting whales, which have
at times included high-seas clashes between the conservationists and the
Japanese.
"The
Japanese whaling fleet intends to kill 1,035 whales of which 50 are endangered
fin whales and 50 are endangered humpback whales, the very same whales that
frequent the shores here off Australia," he said.
"Our
intention is to once again intercept the Japanese whaling fleet in the Southern
Ocean whale sanctuary and to do everything that we can."
Sea
Shepherd Australia said its two other boats the Steve Irwin and Sam Simon left
Melbourne on Wednesday for the annual campaign it took over from the US-based
Sea Shepherd Conservation Society in late 2012.
The
Australian government, which strongly opposes Japanese whaling, is expected to
announce later this week that a Customs vessel will monitor the hunt.
"The
government's commitment to monitoring in the Southern Ocean remains
undiminished," a spokesman for Environment Minister Greg Hunt said in an
email.
But the
left-leaning Greens said the purpose-built Customs vessel that would be used
was nowhere near the Southern Ocean, instead in waters north of Australia on a
border protection mission.
"It is
purpose-built for the Antarctic, it is ice-rated, it is sitting off topical
waters on Christmas Island," said Greens Senator Peter Whish-Wilson.
"I've
got a photo of it during the week sitting in tropical waters. What's it doing
there?"
Australia
wants Japan's annual whale hunt in the southern hemisphere summer to stop and
has taken the matter to the UN's top court the International Court of Justice. A
decision is expected in early 2014.


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