JAPAN FAILS TO TAKE CONTROL OF THE IWC //
Sea Shepherd Shames Greenpeace into Returning to the
Southern Ocean // Update on the Farley Mowat
-----Forwarded Message-----
From: Paul Watson
Sent: Jun 16, 2006 4:18 PM
JAPAN FAILS TO TAKE CONTROL OF THE IWC
Whale Conservationists are smiling today as the International
Whaling Commission meeting opened.
The Japanese have failed again this year in their aggressive
effort to buy votes to control the agenda of the International
Whaling Commission.
They did not succeed in getting all their puppet nations to
show up or vote for their pro-whaling initiatives.
The whales have won over the whalers for another year.
At the first vote of the IWC meeting in St. Kitts & Nevis
the Japanese motioned for a discussion on conservation of
small cetaceans to be struck from the agenda. The Japanese
motion was defeated 32 to 30
Japan then motioned for a secret ballot to decide issues
hoping that nations would vote in favor of whaling if they
were anonymous. That motion failed 33 to 30.
It does not appear that Japan, Norway and Iceland can
muscle the required majority votes to control the 70 member
International Whaling Commission.
A couple of member nations did not show. Israel joined the
IWC as a pro-whale conservation vote and some members
leaning towards Japan have been swayed by their own citizens
who lean in favor of the whales over the bribes of the whalers.
"This is great news for the whales," said Captain Paul Watson.
"Japan will not make any gains this year at the IWC and for
another year at least the whales are safe on paper under the law.
However the renegade illegal activities of Japan and Norway will
continue and once again we must voyage to the remote and
hostile waters of the Southern Oceans to search out and stop
the illegal slaughter. Japan's failure to control the IWC keeps
the legal credibility for our intervention solidly in our court. Once
again we will be hunting criminal whalers in Antarctic waters."
Japan has responded to the failure to muster the votes in a very
childlike manner. Jouji Morishita, the director of International
negotiations on whaling for the Japanese Fisheries Agency said
Japan may decide to pull out of the IWC unless the ban on
commercial whaling is overturned.
Sea Shepherd Shames Greenpeace into Returning to the
Southern Ocean
In February, Greenpeace declared they would not be returning
to the Southern Oceans to oppose illegal Japanese whaling.
The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society publicly chastised
Greenpeace for retreating from the campaign. On February 20,
2005 Sea Shepherd posted the online story entitled:
Greenpeace to Abandon Whales in Antarctica - Sea Shepherd
Will Battle Whalers Alone in Antarctica in 2006/2007
Link:
http://www.seashepherd.org/news/media_060220_1.html
Greenpeace did not respond. Sea Shepherd wrote many
e-mails to Greenpeace demanding that they use the funds
they were raising to oppose whaling to send their ships back
to Antarctica.
Today Greenpeace changed their mind, "We're going back
to the Southern Ocean to oppose the hunt. What are
anti-whaling nations going to do to stop the hunt?" said
Greenpeace spokesperson Shayne Rattenbury.
"This is good news for the whales," said Captain Paul
Watson. "The more ships and the more opposition down
in those waters against illegal whaling, the better it is for the
whales. I just hope that Greenpeace will more aggressive
this time around. The world has seen enough video clips of
whales being slaughtered. These outlaw whalers must be
blockaded and stopped from committing their crimes."
The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society approached
Greenpeace in June 2005 with a request to work in
partnership to jointly oppose Japanese whaling in the
Southern Oceans. Greenpeace refused to communicate
with Sea Shepherd and took the position that Sea Shepherd
crews were overly aggressive towards whaling.
"I was hoping we could play good policeman and bad
policeman with the whalers," said Captain Watson.
"Greenpeace told us they were not interested in cooperation
and did not support our tactics of directly interfering with
the killing of whales, preferring to "bear witness" to the
killing to report it to the world."
Despite the fact that Greenpeace refuses to communicate
or cooperate with the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society
the fact remains that anyone opposed to whaling is an ally,
like it or not to Sea Shepherd.
"Once again, I am reaching out to Greenpeace, an
organization that I co-founded with the request to work
together with Sea Shepherd." Said Captain Watson. "I
suspect I will once again be ignored but I guess there is
no harm in asking although it troubles me that this group
that I helped to create has no time for cooperation with us."
The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society will be sending
two ships and a helicopter and numerous small boats to the
Southern Ocean to once again intervene against illegal
Japanese whaling. The whaling season will begin in
December 2006 with the Japanese targeting over 1,000
whales in the waters off the coast of Antarctica
Update on the Farley Mowat's Escape from Cape Town
The Farley Mowat has successfully departed South Africa
and was over 200 miles from Cape Town as of 2400 Hours
on June 16. The seas are calm and the ship is making good
time. There has been no reports or comments from the
South African authorities. One reporter asked Captain Paul
Watson what and how he knew of the trans-shipment of
whale meat from Cape Town.
"You know when they force your ship into detainment in
the sleaziest section of the harbor and keep you there for
five months, there is a great deal of sleazy information to be
had along with other discomforts. Not only is there trade in
whale-meat there is also a thriving illegal trade in smuggled
shark fins going on in Cape Town harbor," said Captain
Watson. "I find it strange that the authorities find it a priority
to harass a conservation ship yet can't seem to see the trade
in wildlife contraband going on under their very noses. There
is a great deal of fishy business going on in Cape Town
harbour, I can tell you that. South Africa really needs to
undertake a investigation into the shenanigans going on.
This kind of corruption has no place in a respected nation
like South Africa."
Captain Paul Watson
Founder and President of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society (1977-
Co-Founder - The Greenpeace Foundation (1972)
Co-Founder - Greenpeace International (1979)
Director of the Sierra Club USA (2003-2006)
Director - The Farley Mowat Institute
Director -
www.harpseals.org
Director - Ocean Outfall Group of California
Advisory Board Member - Telluride Mountain Film Festival
Advisory Board Member - The Animals Voice Magazine
Whom when I asked from what place he came,
And how he hight, himselfe he did ycleepe,
The Shepheard of the Ocean by Name,
And said he came far from
the main-sea deepe.
- Edmund Spenser
A.C.E. 1590
www.Seashepherd.org
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