Google - AFP,
23 March 2014
![]() |
The
environmental group Sea Shepherd's ship Bob Barker is seen approaching
the
Japanese research vessel Yushin Maru, in the Southern Ocean, on March 2, 2014
(Institute Of Cetacean Research/AFP/File)
|
Sydney —
Environmental activist group Sea Shepherd have returned to land after their
longest-ever anti-whaling campaign in the Southern Ocean, claiming to have
saved more than 750 whales in their annual high seas showdown with Japanese
whalers.
Sea Shepherd's
ships Bob Barker and Steve Irwin docked in Wellington and Hobart Saturday after
94 days at sea, formally ending the group's 10th annual harassment campaign of
the Japanese harpoon fleet.
![]() |
Peter
Hammarstedt, captain of Sea Shepherd's
ship 'Bob Barker', pictured during a
Discovery
Channel event in Beverly Hills, California, on
July 10, 2008 (Getty/AFP/File, Frederick
M. Brown)
|
"Although
the whale poachers have not yet released the number of whales they have killed
this season, we are confident that they have not even reached one quarter of
their bogus self-allocated quota, and estimate that our efforts have saved over
750 whales," he said.
The group
did not offer any details to support their claim and Japan's fisheries agency
was not immediately available for comment.
Sea
Shepherd said this year's campaign, which began on January 5, had been its
longest ever in the Southern Ocean.
"These
whale poachers, heavily funded and backed by the government of Japan, have
thrown absolutely everything at us and we have come out on top," said Jeff
Hansen, director of Sea Shepherd Australia.
During the
season the conservation group said the Japanese had twice been exposed
butchering minke whales poached from the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary.
Japan
catches the animals there under a "scientific research" loophole
being challenged by Australia in the International Court of Justice, with a
ruling due this year.
Steve Irwin
captain Sid Chakravarty said the harpooners had used "aggressive"
tactics to flee from the activists but "they could not hide from us".
Sea
Shepherd estimates that it has saved 4,500 whales from slaughter in nine
previous Southern Ocean campaigns.


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