Protesters held on whaling ship

by ppeggy | January 16, 2008 at 08:04 am
533 views | 10 Recommendations | 4 comments

Photos

A handout photo shows Japanese boat crew members detaining anti-whaling protesters Giles Lane (5th-L) and Benjamin Pots (2nd-R)

A handout photo shows Japanese boat crew members detaining anti-whaling protesters Giles Lane (5th-L) and Benjamin Pots (2nd-R)

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uploaded by ppeggy

High drama on the high seas continues:

Japanese whalers are holding two anti-whaling activists who leapt aboard a Japanese ship near Antarctica. The Japanese fleet is being followed by environmental campaigners, who have promised to disrupt the annual whaling expedition. From Sydney, Phil Mercer reports.
 
Two members of the anti-whaling group Sea Shepherd boarded the Japanese vessel Yushin Maru No. 2 Tuesday. Their colleagues say they were trying to deliver a letter demanding an end to the whale hunt.
 
The two - Australian Benjamin Pott and Giles Lane of Britain - were detained by crew members. The Japanese say the activists illegally boarded the ship, and attacked crewmen with bottles of acid.
 
A Sea Shepherd spokesman says the two men have been mistreated, and called their detention a kidnapping.
 
Glenn Inwood, a spokesman for the whaling fleet, says there is a more appropriate word for the two men's actions.
 
"It is completely illegal to board anyone's vessel, any other country's vessel, on the high seas," he said. "So this can be seen as nothing more than an act of piracy by the Sea Shepherd group. And this is exactly the reason why we have called for these groups to back off."
 
The Sea Shepherd group has been shadowing the Japanese fleet in Antarctic waters aboard its own boat, named "The Steve Irwin" after the famous Australian conservationist who died in 2006.
 
Paul Watson, the captain of the Sea Shepherd boat, says the Japanese have offered to hand the two men back. But Watson says Japanese conditions for doing so are unacceptable.
 
"...There was a condition on us getting the men back, and that condition was that we would refrain from harassing and interfering with their whaling operations, and that's certainly a condition we're not going to meet," said Watson.  more...
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0
nike6

i do not understand why tthey worry so much about whaling.

they are edible for eating, and also they eat other fish. i have read, if whales die naturally, they sink down to the ocean ground, and tiny worms nourish into the corpse upto 150 years!

sure if humans can nourish from whale meat, it is better use than to give it to the maggots!

that's also what the japanese believe. they hunt whales traditionally.

i think it is important to do the whaling economically: not to torture the wales, means to perform the killing clean and quick. the spillage of blood is not required technically.

the environment activists should ask themselves if they do not also eat chickens, pig meat, and beef- animals which are not free, sometimes tortured and so on. guess some of the activists do eat this stuff, they only bandwagon on scare stories to become important. or they are just hysteric, because so much blood is spilled.

and the japanese should stop to declare the whaling "scientific", and hunt them regularily. it won't be impossible for them to understand, if they take out too many, after a while, no whales will be left. 

it is part of human culture to eat animals- no way to deny it. maybe we have the option to fabricate synthetic meats one day- but we must not forget our roots, when it was a question of survival to hunt animals. it is not required technically anymore, nowadays we grow most animals on farms, but we must understand these roots. i think environment activists are doing a white-washing which is not realistic. 

0
ctabuk

But they call it research and as for a quick and painless death -what a load of twaddle -they are mammals - they communicate with each other - they mate for life - these graceful harmless creatures have more right to the planet than many humans. They feel pain and they mourne their dead - if we kill animals for food -then we should do it in abatiors not by shooting a bloody great harpoon into their bodies - you try it - see if it hurts you.

Barbara McPherson
Barbara McPherson
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 14:15 on January 17th, 2008

ppeggy, this is an important story.  It's important because it illustrates that we must make some decisions about sharing the planet with other creatures -- if only for our enlightened self interest.  We must have a serious dialogue about the future of this planet if it is to include a livable future.

Barry ORegan
Barry ORegan
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 06:51 on February 7th, 2008

ppeggy, Perhaps the Japanese should let them Walk the Plank, that'll "Cool their Jets". 

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Barbara McPherson
First Flagged at 2:15 PM, Jan 17, 2008 by Barbara McPherson
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