top
International
International
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Regions
Indybay Regions North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area California United States International Americas Haiti Iraq Palestine Afghanistan
Topics
Newswire
Features
From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature

Activists held Hostage by Whalers in Whale Sanctuary

by Takver - Sydney Indymedia
When the Captain of the Yashin Maru No 2 hunter killer ship refused to respond to any radio communication from the anti-whale activists on board the Sea Shepherd ship Steve Irwin, a decision was made to send two crew members to board the Yashin Maru No2 with a written message to the Captain of the vessel.
gpandsea-img40.jpg

Photo of Benjamin Potts and Giles Lane on board the Yashin Maru No 2. Photo Courtesy ICR

The crew members were detained by the crew of the Japanese whaler, initially being tied up on deck for a number of hours. They have since been taken below decks and detained in a secure room.

Captain Paul Watson, on board the Steve Irwin, had drafted the following letter and sent Australian Benjamin Potts and Briton Giles Lane in a Zodiac boat to the Yushin Maru No 2 to hand deliver it to the Japanese ship's captain.

To: The Captain of any Japanese ship involved with poaching operations in The Australian Antarctic Territorial Economic Exclusion Zone.

Sir,

My name is Giles David Lane.

I am a British citizen and an unpaid volunteer on the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society vessel Steve Irwin.

I have come onboard your ship because you have refused to acknowledge communication from our ship pertaining to your illegal activities in the waters of the Australian Antarctic Territorial Economic Exclusion Zone.

I am not boarding your ship with the intent to commit a crime, to rob you or to inflict injury upon your crew and yourself or damage to your ship.

My reason for boarding is to deliver the message that you are in violation of international conservation law and in violation of the laws of Australia.

It is my intent to deliver this message and then to request that you allow me to disembark from your vessel without harm or seizure.

I am empowered to act to uphold these laws in accordance with the United Nations World Charter for Nature and the laws of Australia.

I am boarding you with the request that you please refrain from any further criminal activity in these waters and cease and desist with the continued killing of endangered whales in this designated Whale Sanctuary in violation of the IWC global moratorium on commercial whaling and that you cease and desist in continued violations of Australian law by killing whales within the territorial waters of Australia without permit or permission from the government of Australia.

I am boarding you on the orders of Captain Paul Watson, who requests that you treat me with respect and in accordance with the Geneva Convention.

----------------------------------------------

With the refusal to return both men, an attempt was made to foul the propellor of the Yashin Maru No 2 and bottles of foul smelling butyric acid were thrown onboard. The ship has since fled from the Steve Irwin and is no longer in radar range. Captain Paul Watson has called the refusal to release his crew members as an act of terrorism and kidnapping.

Mr Minoru Morimoto, Director General of the Institute of Cetacean Research, said the men have not been harmed and were taken to a secure room. However photos, videos and reports from the Sea Shepherd helicopter show them being tied up on deck for a number of hours.

“Any accusations that we have tied them up or assaulted them are completely untrue,” Mr Morimoto said. “It is illegal to board another country’s vessels on the high seas. As a result, at this stage, they are being held in custody while decisions are made on their future.”

"In fact, they tried to throw Benjamin overboard and he had to struggle to stop being thrown overboard because the boat was travelling at 17 knots (30 kmh) and it would have been extremely dangerous. It's a serious situation. They have been kidnapped and held against their will." said Captain Paul Watson. “The activities of the Japanese whaling fleet are illegal under international conservation law. The Japanese are poachers and should be treated in the same manner as elephant or tiger poachers,” he said.

According to media reports the whalers said they will return the hostages in return for Sea Shepherd agreeing to no longer interfere with their whaling operations.

“The Institute of Cetacean Research is acting like a terrorist organization,” said Steve Irwin’s 1st Officer Peter Brown. “Here they are taking hostages and making demands. Our policy is that we don’t respond to terrorist demands.”

There has been no official approach to Sea Shepherd Conservation Society about handing back the anti-whaling activists.

The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society has said it will not negotiate with poachers and demanded that the Japanese whalers release Benjamin Potts and Giles Lane as soon as possible.

Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith has also appealed to the Japanese Government for the unconditional handing over of the activists to the Sea Shepherd ship Steve Irwin. It was reported that Japan agreed to release Benjamin Potts, 28, of Sydney, and Giles Lane, 35, from Britain, after the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) and Australian embassy officials in Tokyo approached the Japanese Government.

But the captain of the Yashin Maru No 2, Yasuaki Sasaki, is refusing to release the men on the instructions of Hideki Moronuki, chief of the whaling section of The Fisheries Agency of Japan who said "Immediately that Paul Watson has accepted the conditions of the safety of the Japanese vessel, they will release the two illegal intruders,"

The claims of kidnapping and mistreatment during their detention on board the Yaqshin Maru No 2 will be investigated by the Australian Federal Police.

Whaling in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary was found to be illegal under Australian law in a landmark decision of the Federal Court of Australia on January 15, 2008.

Sources:

Background

§Sea Shepherd activists detained
by Takver - Sydney Indymedia
080115_crew_hostages_2.jpg
Benjamin Potts and Giles Lane, two Sea Shepherd activists detained after trying to deliver a message to the Whaling ship Captain.
§Sea Shepherd Video: activists tied up
by Takver - Sydney Indymedia
Copy the code below to embed this movie into a web page:
Sea Shepherd activists boarding the Yashin Maru No 2 to deliver a letter to the Captain, and being detained and tied up on deck.
Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by sscs repo
ys2_to_watson_20080115.pdf_600_.jpg
SEA SHEPHERD CREW REMAIN HOSTAGES ON THE JAPANESE WHALING SHIP

ABOARD THE STEVE IRWIN – 16 January 2008 -- 0500 GMT

Twenty-four hours later, Sea Shepherd crew members Giles Lane from the U.K. and Benjamin Potts from Australia remain hostages on the Yushin Maru No. 2.

Media Reports that the hostages have been released to the Sea Shepherd ship Steve Irwin are false. Reports that the Steve Irwin will not accept calls from the Japanese vessels or authorities are false. No calls have been received. The Yushin Maru No. 2 has refused to return radio calls from the Steve Irwin.

No one from the Japanese or Australian government has contacted Sea Shepherd to organize the transfer of the hostages from the Japanese whaler back to the Steve Irwin. The Institute for Cetacean Research, the front group for the illegal Japanese whaling operations did send a letter with demands to be met prior to a release. Sea Shepherd is not interested in any demands based on the holding of hostages.

"Using hostages to make demands is the hallmark of terrorism and Sea Shepherd has no interest in negotiating with terrorist groups," said Captain Paul Watson. "The hostages must be released unconditionally.”
by C. C. van Schaack
Sea Shepherd and Crew are doing the logical response to Japans rape of the Whale species; men go to war for far less, look around the World at the conflicts over land, religion and power. The Whale is a Noble Large Brained Mammal to threaten them in anyway is enough for many other Humans, to take Japan actions to task. What would happen to Japan when People over the Planet refused to Buy their consumer products ? This is a Real Possibility in the Future. So much for a sushi culture. Tao, Vertex
by AFP
WASHINGTON (AFP) — President George W. Bush has exempted the US Navy from an environmental law protecting whales and dolphins from sonar devices used in military exercises off the coast of California, the White House said Wednesday.

Animal welfare groups maintain mid-frequency sonar can disorient marine mammals with sometimes lethal results, while the White House argues the naval exercises are crucial to national security.

Training and other military preparedness exercises by the Navy, "including the use of mid-frequency active sonar ... are in the paramount interest of the United States," said Bush in a memorandum to the Defense Department.

Bush's allows the Navy to override a January 3 injunction issued by a US District Court in California requiring it to "monitor for and avoid marine mammals while operating high-intensity, mid-frequency sonar during ... naval exercises."

Bush's exemption has drawn strong criticism from animal groups who have been fighting for the injunction.

"There is absolutely no justification for this," said California Coastal Commissioner Sara Wan.

"Both the court and the Coastal Commission have said that the Navy can carry out its mission as well as protect the whales. This is a slap in the face to Californians who care about the oceans," she added.

The injunction Bush has waived required the Navy to maintain a 12 nautical mile (22 kilometers) no-sonar buffer zone along the California coastline, and to shut down sonar when marine mammals were spotted within 2,000 meters (yards).

Natural Resources Defense Council director Joel Reynolds said in a statement his group would soon appeal Bush's exemption, which he called "an attack on the rule of law."
by Bob
Your intentions might have been good, but you boarded a ship of another country on the high seas. I believe this constitutes piracy or the like under admiralty law and that the captain was within his right to hold these boarders.
There are very clear international admiralty laws that you may want to read before you try this again.
by J
Benjamin Potts and Giles Lane were transferred from the Yushin Maru No. 2 to the Australian Customs vessel Oceanic Viking early in the morning at 0200 Hours Melbourne time (1300 Hours GMT). The two men were transferred to the Sea Shepherd ship Steve Irwin at 0930 Hours Melbourne time (2030 Hours GMT).
seashepherd.org
by Electra Smith
Law is not set in stone. Law is flexible and open to changes and precedents. Only by taking action against impossibly 'illegal' situations like the licensing of Japanese fleets to go 'whaling' under the guise of research, when they sell the meat back home... Only by confronting the illegal actions of those hiding behind the law can we change the law. Piracy is not cut and dried; unless you call boarding a ship that is not yours an 'act of Piracy', then the US Coast Guard does it every day.
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!

Donate

$330.00 donated
in the past month

Get Involved

If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.

Publish

Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.

IMC Network