portland independent media center  
images audio video
newswire article reporting global

actions & protests | animal rights

Japanese whalers take Sea Shepherds hostage.

In what has been an unpredictably dramatic day for the campaign against whaling in Antarctica, the crew of a Japanese harpoon gunboat have seized Australian and British crew mebers of the Sea Shepherd vessel, Steve Irwin.
Giles Lane is tied up. Benjamin Potts is already bound.
Giles Lane is tied up. Benjamin Potts is already bound.
Astounding! Last year around this time, things were really getting dramatic in the Sea Shepherd pursuit of the Japanese whaling fleet across Antarctica. Crew missing at sea, shipboard fires, the risk of a pristine environment being chemically decimated, and even one human death as an accompaniment to the slaughter of hundreds of mammoth sentient beings.

Not to be outdone, the 2007/08 season of resistance has just kicked into overdrive. Today, the Australian Federal Court called Japanese whaling - in Australian waters, at least - what it is: illegal. The Honourable Justice Allsop issued an injunction ordering that all Japanese whaling within Australian Antarctic waters (which Japan and most other countries don't recognize) stop immediately. So, technically, since about 3pm Australian East Coast time every single crew member of the Japanese whaling fleet has been eligible for arrest should they enter Australian territories.

But the Japanese whaling fleet, as always, needed to up the ante. In the last 50 minutes it has been reported that the crew of the harpoon gunboat Yashin Maru II have taken two Sea Shepherd activists - Australian Benjamin Potts and a Briton, Giles Lane - hostage, and tied them to the radar mast of their ship. Earlier today the Sea Shepherd vessel Steve Irwin broke off its pursuit of the whale-processing factory vessel, also known as the Cetacean Death Star, the Nisshin Maru. With Greenpeace's Esperanza still pursuing the factory ship away from the rest of the whaling fleet, the Shepherds turned about to disrupt the activities of the rest of the scattered fleet.

Obviously, they found them alright. Shepherd Captain Paul Watson reports that the two men, who have now been effectively kidnapped on the high seas - ironically, a genuine act of piracy by the Japanese whalers - had boarded the ship to deliver a letter to the captain proclaiming their whaling activity illegal and demanding an immediate cessation of whale-hunting, as per the order made today by the Federal Court.

Seems that Australian concerns about creating a diplomatic incident with Japan pale in comparison to what the whaling fleet are clearly eager to create.

Stay tuned.
Hugh Manatee
e-mail:  typingisnotactivism@gmail.com
Homepage:  http://typingisnotactivism.wordpress.com

more images 15.Jan.2008 10:53

Sea Hag Sedna


Japanese Crimes 15.Jan.2008 11:05

Den Mark, Vancouver

Japanese culture is every bit as violent as any other. Their history, like ours, is filled with aggression & violence against others. Whaling crimes prove that no species is immune from Japanese cruelty.

Japanese embassy in DC: 202-238-6700.

There's also a consulate in Portland, but i don't have a Portland phone book.

Video of assault 15.Jan.2008 11:33

orca


Oh....I don't know.... 19.Jan.2008 11:41

StevetheGreen

As a white American man who is aware of the privilidge that brings, I am certainly sensistive to the culture of Native Americans and understand that their form of whaling and the impact it has is much different than corporate sponsored whaling. Furthermore I would concede that the Sea Shepard captain Paul Watson has a very insensitive way of talking about the issue and has alienated native Americans by allowing his rhetoric and hyperbole to enter into discussions where it has no place.

But when a species arrrives at a place of decline as most whales have, the racial and cultural component needs to be put in it's proper place. Furthermore, the native American culture is based in respect for the earth and all of it's beings. The fact that the white man came and destroyed that does not then mean that native American culture gets to ignore the state of the environment or the health of certain species.

I have also seen video of the Makah tribe drinking jack daniels and kids with Nikes jumping on a dead whale carcas. Hardly representative of any cultural heritage.

Anyway, I do think it disrespectful to native Americans to say "fuck you" when someone brings up what they see as injustice. I think at the very least, that culture deserves some leeway and respect even if they are the wrong end of an issue.