Protesters clash with Japanese whalers, call for naval intervention

Source:Reuters Published: 2013-2-20 22:03:01

Anti-whaling activists called on Wednesday for Australia to send a naval vessel to the Southern Ocean after a confrontation in which they said a Japanese whaling ship collided with two of their protest vessels, damaging their flagship.

"The Nisshin Maru has rammed the Steve Irwin and the Bob Barker, but both vessels continue to hold their positions," Paul Watson, the founder of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society which runs the protest boats, said in a statement.

Watson also accused Japanese coastguard personnel of throwing concussion grenades at their protest ships during a confrontation in the frigid waters near Antarctica and said the Bob Barker was taking on water in its engine room.

The Sea Shepherd group has clashed with the Japanese fleet for nine whaling seasons in the southern hemisphere summer, and has lost one of its ships, the high-speed trimaran Ady Gil which sank after a collision with a whaler in January 2010.

In the latest incident, activists had been attempting to prevent an 8,000-ton Japanese factory ship refueling from a tanker when the collision occurred, Sea Shepherd director Bob Brown told journalists in Melbourne.

Brown, a former Australian Greens party leader before quitting politics, said the two Sea Shepherd ships had been repeatedly rammed and called on Australia to dispatch a naval ship to the area to calm the tension. "It is illegal to be ramming ships in any seas anywhere on the planet. It is illegal for a tanker to be carrying heavy fuel oil into Antarctic waters under international law," Brown said.

Australia sent an armed customs patrol ship to the Southern Ocean in 2008 to gather evidence of Japanese whaling methods for a legal challenge.

Reuters



Posted in: Asia-Pacific

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