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Japanese Whalers, Activists Clash Again In Antarctic Waters

KRISTEN GELINEAU   02/18/10 11:48 PM ET   AP

Sea Sheapard

SYDNEY — Australia's prime minister on Friday set a November deadline for Japan to stop its research whaling program that kills hundreds of whales a year in Antarctic waters, or else face international legal action.

Australia, a staunch anti-whaling nation, has long threatened international legal action. Two years ago, it sent a ship to Antarctic waters to follow the Japanese whaling fleet and collect videos and photographs it said might be used as evidence in an international forum.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said Australia would prefer to use diplomatic means to persuade Japan to end its hunt.

"If that fails, then we will initiate court action before the commencement of the whaling season in November 2010," he told the Seven Network. "That's the bottom line and we're very clear to the Japanese, that's what we intend to do."

Japan hunts hundreds of mostly minke whales – which are not an endangered species – in Antarctic waters each year under its whaling research program, an allowed exception to the International Whaling Commission's 1986 ban on commercial whaling. Whale meat not used for study is sold for consumption in Japan, which critics say is the real reason for the hunts.

Rudd's threat came on the eve of a visit to Australia by Japanese Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada. Whaling is expected to be a key topic of conversation when Okada meets with Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith this weekend. Japanese officials did not immediately have any comment ahead of the visit.

Australia has said it could argue that Japan's whaling is illegal before the International Court of Justice at The Hague or the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea in Hamburg, Germany.

The whaling is conducted in international waters, but usually within the huge patch of ocean that is designated Australia's maritime rescue zone and that Canberra considers a whale sanctuary.

Don Rothwell, a professor of international law at the Australian National University, was commissioned by the International Fund for Animal Welfare in 2005 to explore Australia's legal options in its fight to end whaling. His report was later presented to both the Australian and New Zealand governments.

Rothwell said Australia could request the courts grant an immediate injunction requiring Japan to stop whaling. Either court would almost certainly grant the injunction, which would remain in place until the case was resolved, he said.

On Wednesday, a group of conservationists clashed with Japanese whalers in the Antarctic Ocean, the most recent in a string of increasingly aggressive confrontations between U.S.-based activist group Sea Shepherd and the whaling fleet.

Sea Shepherd activists threw bottles of butyric acid at Japanese whalers and blasted their ship with paint, while the Japanese returned fire with water cannons. No one was injured, but Japan condemned the conservationists' actions as dangerous and violent. Sea Shepherd officials said they are simply doing what is necessary to protect whales.

Earlier this month, Japan claimed three crew members on one of its whaling vessels suffered face and eye injuries from an acid attack.

On Monday, Sea Shepherd activist Peter Bethune jumped aboard the Shonan Maru 2 from a Jet Ski with the stated goal of making a citizen's arrest of the ship's captain and presenting him with a $3 million bill for the destruction of the Ady Gil.

He was taken into custody by the whalers and will face charges in Japan of trespassing and assault.

New Zealand Foreign Minister Murray McCully said officials had spoken with Bethune by telephone on Thursday and were assured he was being treated properly. Bethune indicated he was happy to remain on board the Shonan Maru II and return to Japan with the vessel, McCully said.

On Feb. 6, Sea Shepherd's ship the Bob Barker and a Japanese harpoon boat collided, causing minor damage to both vessels. And in January, a Japanese whaler struck Sea Shepherd's high-tech speedboat Ady Gil, which sank a day later. No one was seriously injured in those incidents.

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SYDNEY — Australia's prime minister on Friday set a November deadline for Japan to stop its research whaling program that kills hundreds of whales a year in Antarctic waters, or else face intern...
SYDNEY — Australia's prime minister on Friday set a November deadline for Japan to stop its research whaling program that kills hundreds of whales a year in Antarctic waters, or else face intern...
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03:31 PM on 02/19/2010
If someone threw acid & paint at my ship and then illegally boarded it, I'm fairly certain that his body would never be found.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
rf dude
Just an average Man of Bronze
09:13 AM on 02/19/2010
Is it really about the whales, Australia?

Or is it still about almost becoming a Japanese colony in 1940...
01:39 PM on 02/19/2010
I think it's about the whales. the Japanese are using the ruse that they kill the whales for research. Everybody knows it's not true. Thing is, the world is watching now so Japan isn't looking too good.
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04:53 PM on 02/19/2010
It seems it isn't about the whales.

Australia and New Zealand are willing to allow the Japanese to hunt commercially as long as it isn't in the Antarctic. So they care about whales that are nearby but scr*w the rest of the whales.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/earthcomment/geoffrey-lean/7273258/Japan-gets-the-nod-to-kill-whales-again.html
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07:49 AM on 02/19/2010
the "bob barker"!
08:33 PM on 02/18/2010
Excellent. Good for Australia. Japan is wrong on this one and I hope they get crushed. Not that it will mean much, but I'm not buying anything from Japan until they quit whaling.
08:50 AM on 02/19/2010
Japan's economy will soon be on the verge of collapse with the Toyota fiasco, the gov't will not be able to subsidize the loathsome. illegal poaching & slaughter when westerners stop buying their cars...heh...talk about bad karma.
01:50 PM on 02/19/2010
and they've pretty much outfished their seas
08:29 PM on 02/18/2010
I struggle to find any sympathy for the Sea Shepherd crew. Their acts are dangerous and reckless and do nothing to help whale conservation. Also annoying is their criticism of the NZ government for not doing enough to help them. As a kiwi taxpayer and supporter of ocean conservation I would much rather see my money go towards work that makes a positive impact than to bailing out these idiots every time they prang a boat or commit acts of piracy.
08:41 AM on 02/19/2010
they don't need or want any of your sympathy, they have the support of the majority of the Australian people and people across the world.

now tell us, what have YOU done lately to right a wrong in this world instead of bashing others ,who do DO SOMETHING, from a keyboard.
12:32 PM on 02/19/2010
Above is a typical response from SSCS and other groups like it. Attack the individual or the people rather than respond to the post or deal with the issue in an informed professional manner. Recently I have seen a growing negative response to SSCS, PETA and other groups like these. Doing more damage than good and tarring everybody else, who are dealing with environmental issues, with the same brush. To the Japanese, don't back down, don't give in, stand your ground. Its like the Newfoundland Seal Hunt, we will never yield to an organization whose sole interest in an environmental issue is governed by its ability to generate donations. That's a fact.
08:17 PM on 02/18/2010
The SSCS calls themselves a "conservation" society, when they are not, conservation is management for sustainable use. Why are they trying to "preserve" species that are not at risk (seals and minke whales), ignoring species that are "are risk". Calling themselves "enforcers" when they have no mandate. Its all about fundraising and making a living from protesting.
01:45 PM on 02/19/2010
you guys may be right. However, it is because of these newsworthy attention grabbing tactics, that MOST of the GENERAL public knows about these animal issues, not the diplomatic behind the scene do gooders (which serve a purpose and do good work of course).

But like it or not, this is the kind of stuff people pay attention to. And now the world is watching, which is great!

Too often laws are broken by corporations and nobody cares because it doesn't make the news. This puts it out there and I'm all for that.
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04:56 PM on 02/19/2010
Except no laws are being broken.
08:14 PM on 02/18/2010
Butyric Acid

Inhalation causes irritation of mucous membrane and respiratory tract; may cause nausea and vomiting. Ingestion causes irritation of mouth and stomach. Contact with eyes may cause serious injury. Contact with skin may cause burns; chemical is readily absorbed through the skin and may cause damage by this route. (USCG, 1999
01:46 PM on 02/19/2010
meh, sounds like most household chemicals in the typical American home.
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04:56 PM on 02/19/2010
Yup. And how many people, especially children, die from household chemicals every year?
08:05 PM on 02/18/2010
Here is the real Paul Watson; Paul Watson's comment when 4 sealers died while under tow by a Coast Guard vessel. He was gleeful and talked about justice to those who would kill seals. Another memorable Watson quote was on CBC radio following his expulsion from Greenpeace. He was asked why he was focused on the seal hunt. He responded "because there is no money left in dolphins".
07:25 PM on 02/18/2010
Why does the pirate captain wear a wig? Somehow an envirowhacko wearing a wig is incongruous.
12:45 PM on 02/19/2010
Mr. Paul Watson is no pirate. I've seen a real pirate, my three year old son dressed as on for Halloween. No matter what Watson does he will never reach that level in the "priate world".
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
amber15
06:08 PM on 02/18/2010
Go Whalers!!!
True HEROES of the high seas and defenders of innocent animals used and abused by greedy humans trying to make a buck by selling toxic whale meat to innocent japanese

They ARE the Robin hoods of the 21st century
06:45 PM on 02/18/2010
Whale meat is toxic? Who knew? Maybe we could get the taliban to eat it then...
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07:31 PM on 02/18/2010
No actually some coastal dolphin meat has high levels of mercury.

But the Minke whales from the Antarctic have some of the lowest levels of mercury of any seafood anywhere in the world.
08:22 PM on 02/18/2010
Today all animals are toxic to some extent, perhaps of the domestically raised are more so. Yes, Paul Watson is indeed a Robin Hood. Taking donations from the rich and looking after his own interests.
05:30 PM on 02/18/2010
If mink whales are not endangered, then exactly what is the objection to the whaling?
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05:44 PM on 02/18/2010
Some of them think no animals should be killed. Others think whales are special among animals so even though some animals are OK to kill, whales should be sacred.

But the biggest reason, especially among the leadership, appears to be that whales are 'cute' and bring in the donations so they don't have to get real jobs. Also they get to sail around acting like pirates and say neat things like "Whaling stops today!!!" with really serious expressions.

Of course whaling continues unabated.
06:44 PM on 02/18/2010
Thanks. And declaring it to be a crisis keeps the energy and attention up. Kinda like the ozone layer. Oh. That was yesterday's crisis. Now it is AGW.
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04:52 PM on 02/18/2010
Why does the SSCS keep saying they throw rotten butter and that it is non toxic? And why do the media keep reporting it that way?

The SSCS throws commercially produced butyric acid, "Butyric acid is prepared on a large scale by the fermentation of starch or sugar. Fermentation uses microorganisms and takes place under conditions where there is no oxygen. It is the transformation of the glucose in these compounds to alcohol or butyric acid, in this case. The microbes gain energy from this process. Less energy is produced than if the compounds were transformed in the presence of oxygen."

This was admitted to by the Sea Shepherds UK Director Steve Roest on the Animal Planet ‘Whale Wars’ forum.

And as far as non-toxic here is what the CDC has to say:

http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/ipcsneng/neng1334.html

In summary:
"Collect leaking liquid in sealable containers. Cautiously neutralize remainder with soda lime. Then wash away with plenty of water. Do NOT let this chemical enter the environment. (Extra personal protection: complete protective clothing including self-contained breathing apparatus). " Note that the CD capitalized the word not on the website.

Inhalation - Sore throat. Cough. Burning sensation. Shortness of breath. Laboured breathing. Symptoms may be delayed

Skin - Pain. Redness. Blisters. Skin burns.

Eyes - Pain. Redness. Severe deep burns. Loss of vision.

Ingestion - Burning sensation. Abdominal pain. Shock or collapse.

If that is non-toxic rancid butter than I am the King of France.
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04:00 PM on 02/18/2010
so the conservationist boarded the whaler ship with the stated goal of making an arrest, or kidnapping, and leaving a bill also known as a ransom. This seems to just be piracy to me.
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04:59 PM on 02/18/2010
It is pracy by the UN definition from the 'Law of the Sea' Article 101.

Right now it isn't clear if the Japanese plan to charge him with piracy under the UN LOS or with violations of the Japanese Maritime Laws, since a vessel in international waters falls under the laws of the nation by which it is flagged.

Interestingly because Mr. Bethune launched his 'mission' from the SSCS vessel Steve Irwin, using equipment from the Steve Irwin, with assistance of the crew of the Steve Irwin and with full knowledge and support of the Steve Irwins master, Paul Watson, Article 103 of the UN LOS makes the Steve Irwin a pirate vessel and all its crew pirates. Yet Hobart Australia is ready to celebrate the arrive of the Steve Irwin.
05:28 PM on 02/18/2010
It sure makes for good television though. I wonder what their income from that is. And the pirate captain wears a wig. I'm just sayin.
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05:41 PM on 02/18/2010
Yeah, there website says they are headed back to Australia, so this latest 'attack' was to film up the film reels so they can make it look like they did some good.
03:01 PM on 02/18/2010
All the sea shepards crew

keeps saying they are willing to die for their cause.

Why don't they get on with it?
02:49 PM on 02/18/2010
Until the International Whaling Commission ends this ridiculous loophole (research my @$$) drama on the high seas will ciontinue.