Anti-whaling protesters rescued from Antarctic waters

Barbara McMahon in Sydney
Friday February 9, 2007
Guardian Unlimited 


The Robert Hunter, a ship operated by the anti-whaling group Sea Shepherd 
Conservation Society, (foreground) follows the Japanese whaling ship Nisshin 
Maru in Antarctic waters. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
 

  Two anti-whaling protesters were dramatically rescued from the freezing 
waters of the Antarctic today after angry clashes at sea between 
environmentalists and the crew of a Japanese whaling ship.   One of the men, 
part of a group of activists trying to stop Japan's annual whale hunt, 
described their ordeal as "pretty hairy" and said they had lassoed an iceberg 
for protection from strong winds and to stop themselves drifting away.   John 
Gravois said he and his crewmate, Karl Neilsen, huddled in their damaged 
inflatable craft for eight hours in freezing fog, snow and sleet before being 
hauled to safety aboard the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society's flagship, 
Farley Mowat.                     
   

"When they found us it was a feeling of the most extreme relief that you can 
imagine," said Mr Gravois.   The anti-whaling activist, from Los Angeles, said 
that he and his Australian crewmate had been trying to foul the propeller of 
the Japanese ship but had gone too close and collided with its hull.   Their 
small craft began letting in water and they fell behind other small boats in 
the fleet that were also trying to sabotage the whaling ship's activities. When 
they tried to use their radio to call for help, they discovered it did not 
work.   Whalers and protesters called a temporary truce and conducted a joint 
search for the men, who said they were saved because they were wearing survival 
suits.   Paul Watson, the head of the Sea Shepherd group and captain of the 
Farley Mowat, acknowledged the help of the Japanese in the search and rescue 
mission. But he also said his vessel and another Sea Shepherd craft, the Robert 
Hunter, would resume their pursuit of the Nisshin Maru
 and its three smaller boats.   He predicted that there would be more 
confrontations in the days to come. Earlier on Friday, the protestors had 
splashed six litres of butyric acid onto the ship's flensing deck, where whales 
are stripped of their blubber.   Butyric acid is a corrosive chemical and 
contact can cause severe irritation and burns of the eyes and skin, leading to 
permanent damage. Two Japanese crewmen sustained injuries from the attack, 
Kyodo news agency reported, drawing protests from a senior Japanese fisheries 
official who called the protester's activities "piratical, terrorist acts".   A 
global moratorium on commercial whaling has existed since 1986, but Japan kills 
hundreds of whales each year under a scientific whaling programme.   The Sea 
Shepherd Conservation Society, founded in Canada in 1977, is a controversial 
marine mammal protection group, with a particular focus on illegal whaling and 
sealing. Its actions have brought it into conflict with other
 environmental organizations, who see its methods as being too extreme, a claim 
rejected by the group.   Captain Watson is described as an "eco terrorist" by 
the Japanese government-funded Institute for Cetacean Research (ICR), which is 
paying for this year's hunt for 850 minke and 10 endangered fin whales. 














 
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