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Anti-whaling ship pursued by
Japanese coast guard vessel
Sea Shepherd's STEVE IRWIN is
chased by FUKUYOSHI MARU No68...
The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society ship Steve Irwin
is en route back to Melbourne from the Southern Ocean. And the ship is
not returning alone.
“We continue to be pursued by the Japanese vessel Fukuyoshi Maru No.
68,” said Captain Paul Watson. “This vessel has maintained a distance
of 7 miles and has tailed the Steve Irwin since January 15th.”
According to media reports, the Japanese Coast Guard has admitted that
there is an armed Japanese Coast Guard team in the Southern Oceans.
"Coast guards are there with a view to protect human lives and assets
as they have suffered damage at the hands of activists," Japan Coast
Guard spokesman Takashi Matsumori said on Tuesday, January 29th.
This is the first time since 1992 that the Japanese Coast Guard
personnel have been sent to a non-Coast Guard vessel outside of
Japanese territorial waters. The Coast Guard departed from Japan in
December on a supply ship according to the Mainichi Shimbun.
The Fisheries Agency officially requested the Coast Guard protection
and the government approved the request. Matsumori declined to give
details about the current Coast Guard operation, citing security
reasons, but said officers had the right to carry guns or other
weapons. The guards "could make arrests if activists enter a ship
without permission of the captain," he said.
Two Sea Shepherd crewmembers, Giles Lane from Briton and Benjamin
Potts from Australia, boarded a harpoon vessel on January 15th, which
resulted in an international incident that was resolved only when
Australia agreed to transfer the crewmembers from the Japanese vessel
Yushin Maru No. 2 back to the Steve Irwin.
Matsumori said the Coast Guard had not been able to take action on
that occasion because the officers were on a different ship which was
not nearby. Shortly after the boarding the Fukuyoshi Maru No. 68
arrived and has tailed the Steve Irwin ever since.
“We believe that the armed Japanese Coast Guard officers are on the
Fukuyoshi Maru No. 68 and that their task is to prevent us from
interfering with Japanese whaling operations,” said Captain Watson.
“They have been certainly relaying our positions to the whaling
fleet.”
The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society questions why the Australian
Customs and Fisheries vessel Oceanic Viking was required to remove
their guns prior to monitoring the Japanese fleet while the Japanese
fleet is guarded by armed government military personnel. Sending armed
Japanese military officers into the Antarctic Treaty Zone is also a
violation of the Antarctic Treaty.
The Sea Shepherd ship Steve Irwin is making plans to return to the
Southern Ocean as soon as it can be refuelled and one of the main
engines repaired. The Sea Shepherd Society is also looking to recruit
replacement volunteer crew and needs to collect fresh provisions.
“We can stop the whaling if we can continue to chase them and harass
them,” said Captain Paul Watson. “We’re not deterred by the Japanese
Coast Guard. Over the last 30 years I have battled the Navies of
Norway, Denmark, Portugal and the Soviet Union and the Canadian Coast
Guard. We were not deterred after being fired on by the Soviets and
the Norwegians and we will not be deterred by the Japanese. They are
the criminals illegally slaughtering whales and we are the defenders
upholding international conservation law in accordance with the
principles of the United Nations World Charter for Nature.”
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