The Star Malaysia

Graphic Australian video of Japanese whaling released

-

SYDNEY: Activist group Sea Shepherd released graphic video of Japanese fishermen harpooning whales in the Southern Ocean after a long battle with the Australian government to make the images public.

Filmed in 2008 by customs officials aboard an Australian patrol vessel, the images show Japanese boats in Antarctic waters harpooning the whales and then dragging their bodies out of bloodied waters.

Sea Shepherd initiated a freedom of informatio­n (FOI) request in 2012 to obtain the film from the Australian department of border protection, but was repeatedly refused with the government citing potential damage to “internatio­nal relations”.

The images were finally ordered released earlier this year after an appeal to Australia’s Informatio­n Commission­er, who has power to review government agency FOI decisions.

“The Australian Government has suppressed this footage for years. The main reason given was that the images of this horrific slaughter would harm diplomatic relationsh­ips with Japan,” Sea Shepherd’s managing director Jeff Hansen said in a statement. “The Australian Government has chosen to side with the poachers instead of defending the whales of the Southern Ocean,” he said.

Sea Shepherd has waged an often violent 12-year high-seas battle against whaling in the Southern Ocean, claiming success for saving thousands of the giant mammals and bringing the slaughter to world attention.

The organisati­on announced earlier this year that it was ending its annual campaign to disrupt Japanese whaling, saying it was exploring different strategies to hinder the hunt as it could no longer match the paramilita­ry and economic might Tokyo was deploying.

Japan is a signatory to the Internatio­nal Whaling Commission’s moratorium on whaling in force since 1986. But it exploits a loophole allowing whales to be killed for the purposes of “scientific research”, making no secret of the fact that they often end up on dinner plates.

Tokyo was forced to call off the 2014-15 hunt after the Internatio­nal Court of Justice ruled its annual Antarctic foray was a commercial hunt, masqueradi­ng as science.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia