Japanese whaler harpoon in near-miss with protesters (Reuters) Updated: 2006-01-16 09:07
A Japanese whaling harpoon narrowly missed an inflatable boat carrying
environmental protesters, causing one to fall into the freezing sea, as both
sides warn their face-off is becoming increasingly dangerous.
The Greenpeace vessel Arctic Sunrise has been shadowing the Japanese whaling
fleet for several weeks in an attempt to disrupt Japan's annual whale hunt,
prompting a heated exchange on January 8 when the Greenpeace ship and a Japanese
ship collided.
In the latest incident on Saturday, the harpoon came within a metre of the
inflatable boat as it tried to shield a minke whale, the environmental group
said.
The harpoon's trailing line knocked one activist into the sea. He scrambled
back aboard the boat without injury.
Greenpeace expedition leader Shane Rattenbury said the whalers were taking
more risks to fill their catch in Antarctic waters south of Australia.
Greenpeace activists sit in their inflatable
boat after a harpoon fired from a Japanese whaling ship narrowly missed
them in the Southern Ocean January 14, 2006.
[Reuters] | "There is definitely an increasing
level of tensions down here and the harpooners are certainly starting to take
shots that perhaps a week or two weeks ago they would not have taken,"
Rattenbury told Sky television.
"Yesterday took it to a new level -- we are very concerned about that," he
said, adding the incident might force Greenpeace to review its tactics.
But Japan's Institute of Cetacean Research in Tokyo said it was Greenpeace
that was taking more risks to remain in the media spotlight.
A Greenpeace activist grabs the rope from a
harpoon as he tries to get back aboard an inflatable boat after a harpoon
fired from a Japanese whaling ship narrowly missed them in the Southern
Ocean January 14, 2006.[Reuters] | Institute chief Hiroshi Hatanaka said in a statement Greenpeace put its
inflatable boat dangerously close to the bow of the whaling vessel when the
harpooner fired.
"Our harpooner had a clear shot and took it. The strike was perfect and the
whale was killed instantly," he said.
"The fact that the rope fell onto their inflatable and one of the activists
fell into the water is entirely their fault. We are also concerned that they
tried to cut the line because it makes it more dangerous for them."
Australia, a strong opponent of Japan's whaling programme, has refused to
intervene by sending navy ships to monitor the whaling and protests.
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said last week Australia sympathised with
the protesters, but said they had to make sure their protest was peaceful and
did not endanger anyone.
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