Kuwait Times

New Zealand rebukes Japan in whaling row

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WELLINGTON: New Zealand sharply criticized Japan yesterday for allowing a whaling ship to enter New Zealand’s maritime economic zone. The government said Japan ignored requests that the Shonan Maru 2 steer clear of New Zealand’s 200-nautical mile exclusive economic zone as the whaler pursued an anti-whaling vessel operated by protest group Sea Shepherd.

Japan defended the incident, saying any ship is allowed under internatio­nal rules to enter an exclusive economic zone, and that it had been necessary to protect Japanese whalers from the activists’ protest.

The incident comes during height- ened tensions over Japan’s whaling. Last week, a different Japanese whaling ship and a second Sea Shepherd boat collided in the icy seas off Antarctica, with both sides blaming each other for the crash.

New Zealand Foreign Minister Murray McCully said Japan’s latest actions were “unhelpful, disrespect­ful and short-sighted” and that Japanese Ambassador Yasuaki Nogawa had been summoned on Monday to meet with a senior official who expressed New Zealand’s “deep disappoint­ment.”

“The New Zealand Embassy in Tokyo last week made it very clear we did not want members of the Japanese whaling fleet entering our EEZ,” McCully said. “New Zealand’s strong opposition to Japanese whaling in the Southern Ocean is well known and further action may be taken.”

He didn’t elaborate on what the action might be. Japan’s chief government spokesman, Yoshihide Suga, said the Japanese ship’s entry into New Zealand’s EEZ was “part of necessary safety measures that Japan had to take.” “We don’t see any problem,” he said. Suga also defended Japan’s research whaling as legitimate under internatio­nal rules, and condemned Sea Shepherd’s actions as “dangerous and illegal acts” that endanger Japanese crewmember­s and their ships.

Glenn Inwood, a spokesman for the Institute of Cetacean Research, which is funded by the Japanese government, said every vessel has a right to enter another country’s economic waters, and New Zealand’s request for the boat to stay away was not legally enforceabl­e.

He said the Shonan Maru 2 was monitoring the Sea Shepherd protest boat Steve Irwin following harassment near Antarctica. “It’s important for their own safety to know exactly where the Sea Shepherd pirate vessels are at all times,” Inwood said.

Speaking by satellite phone from the Steve Irwin, captain Siddharth Chakravart­y said his organizati­on abides by the law and is trying to prevent the unwarrante­d slaughter of whales. He said the Shonan Maru 2 had been tailing their vessel for a week.

Under the provisions of a United Nations treaty signed by more than 160 countries including New Zealand and Japan, each country has certain sovereign rights over their economic zone. Those rights are not as strong as the rights for territoria­l waters, which extend 12 nautical miles from the shore.

The Southern Hemisphere whaling season typically runs through the end of March. Associated Press writer Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo contribute­d to this report.— AP

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