Militant anti-whaling group Sea Shepherd yesterday said the Japanese fleet had left the Antarctic whale sanctuary and appeared to be heading home with its smallest catch yet, hailing an “enormously successful” harassment campaign.
Sea Shepherd founder Paul Watson said this year would likely see the lowest haul in history by the Japanese whalers, with “no more than 75” of the animals killed due to the group’s efforts.
That compares with a catch of 267 last year — 266 minke whales and one fin whale — and is dramatically below the target of 935 minke whales and up to 50 fin whales set for this season by Japan’s Institute for Cetacean Research.
“The entire Japanese whaling fleet is now north of 60 degrees and out of the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary,” Watson said.
“Is whaling over for the season? We are not positive, but we are 80 percent sure that it may be over,” he said. “This campaign will see the lowest take by the Japanese whaling fleet in the entire history of their Antarctic whale hunts.”
Watson said the South Korean-owned, Panamanian-flagged supply tanker the Sun Laurel was 48 hours from the factory ship Nisshin Maru, with a four-day return trip to the whaling sanctuary looking increasingly unlikely.
“This would leave about a week to kill whales and with the weather quickly deteriorating it would hardly be worth the effort,” he said.
Watson said Sea Shepherd had seen the Japanese kill just two minke whales, and they had only had two days of unobstructed hunting in the whole season, which began in December last year.
“My conservative estimate of the number of whales killed this year is no more than 75. It could be much lower, but certainly not higher,” he said.
Watson described the campaign, in which each side accused the other of ramming attacks, as “enormously successful” and said Sea Shepherd would “continue to follow the whaling fleet north to ensure that they do not return to kill whales.”
Despite several years of sustained harassment campaigns by Sea Shepherd and international condemnation, Japan continues to catch whales under a scientific research clause in international whaling bans.
It makes no secret of the fact that the meat ends up on dinner tables.
Japanese Fisheries Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi vowed last month that Japan would never stop whaling, describing criticism by environmentalists and nations including Australia as “a kind of prejudice against Japanese culture.”
Australia has taken Japan to the International Court of Justice over its whaling program, seeking an end to the slaughter.
Sea Shepherd has also been hauled before the courts, with a US judge banning the activists in a December ruling from physically confronting any vessel in the Japanese fleet.
They are also required to stay at least 500m from whaling vessels and prohibited from “navigating in a manner that is likely to endanger the safe navigation of any such vessel.”
An appeals court last week labeled Sea Shepherd “pirates,” clearing the way for the Japanese to pursue an injunction against their activities in the Southern Ocean, which were described as “violent acts for private ends.”
A colossal explosion in the sky, unleashing energy hundreds of times greater than the Hiroshima bomb. A blinding flash nearly as bright as the sun. Shockwaves powerful enough to flatten everything for miles. It might sound apocalyptic, but a newly detected asteroid nearly the size of a football field now has a greater than 1 percent chance of colliding with Earth in about eight years. Such an impact has the potential for city-level devastation, depending on where it strikes. Scientists are not panicking yet, but they are watching closely. “At this point, it’s: ‘Let’s pay a lot of attention, let’s
UNDAUNTED: Panama would not renew an agreement to participate in Beijing’s Belt and Road project, its president said, proposing technical-level talks with the US US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Sunday threatened action against Panama without immediate changes to reduce Chinese influence on the canal, but the country’s leader insisted he was not afraid of a US invasion and offered talks. On his first trip overseas as the top US diplomat, Rubio took a guided tour of the canal, accompanied by its Panamanian administrator as a South Korean-affiliated oil tanker and Marshall Islands-flagged cargo ship passed through the vital link between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. However, Rubio was said to have had a firmer message in private, telling Panama that US President Donald Trump
CHEER ON: Students were greeted by citizens who honked their car horns or offered them food and drinks, while taxi drivers said they would give marchers a lift home Hundreds of students protesting graft they blame for 15 deaths in a building collapse on Friday marched through Serbia to the northern city of Novi Sad, where they plan to block three Danube River bridges this weekend. They received a hero’s welcome from fellow students and thousands of local residents in Novi Said after arriving on foot in their two-day, 80km journey from Belgrade. A small red carpet was placed on one of the bridges across the Danube that the students crossed as they entered the city. The bridge blockade planned for yesterday is to mark three months since a huge concrete construction
DIVERSIFY: While Japan already has plentiful access to LNG, a pipeline from Alaska would help it move away from riskier sources such as Russia and the Middle East Japan is considering offering support for a US$44 billion gas pipeline in Alaska as it seeks to court US President Donald Trump and forestall potential trade friction, three officials familiar with the matter said. Officials in Tokyo said Trump might raise the project, which he has said is key for US prosperity and security, when he meets Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba for the first time in Washington as soon as next week, the sources said. Japan has doubts about the viability of the proposed 1,287km pipeline — intended to link fields in Alaska’s north to a port in the south, where