Paul Watson of the anti-whaling group Sea Shepherd says that he was shot by Japanese sailors while protesting against their hunting practices in the Antarctic. Watson, captain of the Sea Shepherd ship the Steve Irwin, stated that his crew had been throwing stink bombs at the sailors, but that they responded with gunfire and flash grenades.
Watson said he was hit in the chest and found a bullet in the ballistic vest he was wearing. Watson told Australian radio: “It bruised my shoulder but it would have hit my heart if I didn’t have the vest”. He says one of his crew members received minor injuries after being hit by a flash grenade. News.com.au reported that Ralph Lowe, 33, had a bruised back from a flash grenade that exploded behind him, and that Ashley Dunn, 35, received a hip injury while trying to get away from an explosion. David Page, the ship’s doctor, was filmed by the Sea Shepherd group prying a bullet from Watsons’s Kevlar vest, and said “You have been hit by a bullet”.
Tokyo denied Watson’s account, stating that “warning devices” were thrown after their ship had been attacked. Japan’s foreign ministry said that their coastguard on the Nisshin Maru threw a baseball-sized device which exploded near the protesters’ ship and emitted a loud sound, and was not designed to cause harm to anyone. Glenn Inwood, spokesman for the Japanese whalers, told ABC Radio: “Any claim from Paul Watson that he was fired at with a gun and has a bullet lodged in his bulletproof vest is absolutely false.” Inwood stated there had been “retaliation” when the Japanese coast guards fired warning balls at the Steve Irwin.
Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith released a statement regarding information he received from Japanese officials: “Japanese officials have now advised the Australian embassy in Tokyo that during the incident in the Southern Ocean this afternoon, three warning balls — also known as flashbangs — had been fired … Japanese officials have advised that these devices are designed to make a loud noise but not to injure, and that no gunshots had been fired.” Japan also told the Australian Embassy that one of the crew members of the Nisshin Maru had fired a warning shot in the air. Smith stated: “I absolutely condemn actions by crew members of any vessel that cause injury – or have the potential to cause injury – to anyone on the high seas … The Australian Government once again calls on all parties in the Southern Ocean – including all protest and whaling vessels, and their respective crews – to exercise restraint.”
Watson explained to Australia’s ABC News that the Japanese whalers had no reason to fire on the protesters: “We were doing what we usually do, which is putting stink bombs on deck … We go out of our way to make sure we don’t throw them near anybody, but they were throwing the flash grenades directly at us.” If Watson’s statements are proven to be true, the actions of the Japanese saliors represents a breach of international law.
Japan claimed that four crew members of the Nisshin Maru were injured in the confrontation, but Watson denied this. Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura criticized the Sea Shepherd group in a statement to reporters: “They have repeatedly resorted to such activities and it is truly unforgivable … Is it all right to hurt humans in order to protect whales? I think whales are cute and important creatures, but even so, hurting humans is unforgivable.”
Earlier this week, Sea Shepherd protesters clashed with the Nisshin Maru, and threw stink bombs and “slippery” powder at the Japanese ship. Two Sea Shepherd protesters were taken hostage in January after they boarded a Japanese harpoon ship, the Yushin Maru No. 2, and Australia later brokered their release. Protesters have been following the Nisshin Maru since Japan began its annual hunt for whales in the Southern Ocean in December.
Both New Zealand and Australia have led international protests against the hunting of whales. Last month Australia released film of whale slaughter taken from its customs ship, the Oceanic Viking, and said the footage could be used in a potential international legal challenge to Japan’s whaling activities. Due to a loophole in a 1986 global moratorium on whaling that allows “lethal research” on whales, Japan kills up to 1,000 of the mammals per year.
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CaptDMO said,
Hey! Where does Paul Watson of the anti-whaling group Sea Shepherd, and the rest of the crew of the Steve Irwin, get funding to operate in
international waters?
I wonder…. How many folks rely on the Japanese “lethal research” on whales cited in the 1986 global moratorium on whaling?
As many as were relying on the housing development recently burned to the ground?
As many as that relied on a Durham NC conviction?
As many as relied on the US in Viet Nam?
“Japan kills up to 1,000 of the mammals per year.”
Really? Wow!
That’s as surprising as “40.000 international sex slaves imported for the Olympics” and the ironic “hockey stick” proof of predicted global warming.
I PROTEST the chemical attack on Japanese fishing vessels in international waters. I DEMAND an international UN council find Sea Shepard, and all it’s members, especially the crew of the Steve Irwin, guilty of acts of piracy on the high seas, interference with international sea lanes, and violation of Geneva Convention accords prohibiting the use of chemical weapons.
March 7, 2008 at 5:12 pm
CaptDMO said,
Last month Australia released film of whale slaughter taken from its customs ship, the Oceanic Viking, and said the footage could be used in a potential international legal challenge to Japan’s whaling activities.
If this took place in Australian waters it’s an outright offense, in Australia.
Procede accordingly.
If not, what was an “Australian customs ship” doing in international waters?
Did they forget to pay their NSA satellite TV bill?
March 7, 2008 at 5:22 pm
The Vicar said,
I’m against whaling, but I have to wonder what that guy really did to make somebody to take a shot at him in the first place.
Lucky for him they didn’t hit his head!
When I go into a place and I know I need to wear a ballistic vest I know there’s gonna be trouble of some kind.
There has to be a better way to protest that won’t get a fellow shot at, that’s for sure.
March 8, 2008 at 8:27 pm