Commentary and Editorial

rss_icon_14Get RSS for this page now!  Sign up via My Sea Shepherd

Read opinion articles written by Captain Paul Watson or guest authors regarding issues of the day.



Print
Monday, January 5, 2009

The Death of a Whaler

Commentary by Captain Paul Watson

I never met Hajime Shirasaki. I'm sure that if I had met him, we would not have agreed on much. He was a whaler and I detest whalers and I'm sure he detested us for our efforts to protect his victims.

But Hajime Shirasaki was also a human being with a family and friends who will miss him. And for that we sympathize with his family for their loss.

Hajime died yesterday. His body was claimed by the Great Southern Ocean and chances are it will not be recovered. To fall off a ship in these waters in the night means death and every sailor knows it. The water temperature is zero degrees Celsius. Death comes quick in these seas. Still, to watch your ship sail on as you lay helpless and freezing in its wake is a terrifying experience.

Hajime was a young man of 30. Why he decided to join the crew of a whaling ship is unknown to us but it was a decision that he made.

Apparently Hajime, an engine room oiler on the Kyoshin Maru No. 2 a scouting ship for the Japanese whaling fleet, went outside at night by himself dressed only in coveralls. He never came back inside.

There are three possibilities. He accidentally fell overboard. He was pushed or he committed suicide. We will probably never know. What we do know is that he is the third fatality suffered by the Japanese whaling fleet since 2007.

A crewmember of the Nisshin Maru died in a fire in January 2007 and a second crewmember on the Nisshin Maru died in the summer of 2007 in an industrial accident onboard the factory ship. He was crushed in the conveyor that loaded the whale meat into the hold.

The Japanese whaling industry has been screaming about Sea Shepherd being a threat to safety at sea. Yet in the five voyages that Sea Shepherd has made to oppose illegal Japanese whaling, not a single Japanese whaler has been injured and Sea Shepherd has not had any crew injured. We have an unblemished safety record. It appears to me that the whaling industry should improve their safety measures instead of scape-goating us for their lack of responsibility. The truth is that Sea Shepherd does not pose a threat to the crew on the whaling vessels. The whaling industry kills whales and whalers. It is an industry of death.

The crew of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society ship Steve Irwin send their condolences to the family of Hajime Shirasaki. His death is a tragedy. And the slaughter of the whales is also a great tragedy. How many more whales and humans have to die before Japan abolishes this brutal and barbaric annual slaughter of the whales in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary?

###

 
Print
Monday, December 29, 2008

We Pirates Speak for the Whales

By Captain Paul Watson (On board the Steve Irwin off the coast of Antarctic)

To the Editor of The Australian,

It seems that the Australian newspaper needs a lesson on the history of piracy, judging by the conniption fit of an editorial in its paper today.

There is a reason that we adopted the Jolly Roger in response to our critics calling us pirates. We did it to embrace the accusation in a positive manner, and well, kids love the pirate image. If we turn back the pages of history to the 17th Century we find that when piracy was running rampant in the Caribbean, it was not the British Navy that put an end to it. There was no shortage of British politicians, merchants and military officers taking bribes to look the other way. Piracy in the Caribbean was ended by Henry Morgan, a pirate who was knighted for his efforts. His authority to intervene came after the act and not before it. And like Morgan we are pirates motivated by justice in pursuit of pirates motivated by greed.

Other notable pirates in history who served the public well were Sir Francis Drake, Sir Walter Raleigh, John Paul Jones, and Jean LaFitte. As to where we get our authority to intervene, that is a question easily answered. The United Nations World Charter for Nature allows for individuals and non-governmental organizations to uphold international conservation law. It is written in the Charter as plain as day.

We have been harassing the Japanese pirate whalers since 2002 without causing a single injury, without being charged with a single crime and without being sued. Pretty tame stuff for a bunch of bad pirates I would think. To compare us to a terrorist bombing a restaurant is absurd. Such a person would be charged with a crime for that action.

All I can say to our critics is either arrest us, sue us or shut up. Spewing opinionated drivel is hardly an indictment.

Read more...
 
Print
Monday, December 29, 2008

Lumberjacks in Eden

Guest Commentary by Peter Hall

Preface

I am the steward of $3 billion of savings and investments. I am charged with the duty of protecting that capital and
making it grow and I must try to understand not just short-term issues but the 'over-the-horizon' factors that affect its
security.

I see a world with two faces - one imbued with the happy cheer of a good party; the other grim and frightening.
The economic world, the world of humanity, is undergoing a huge boom as the industrial capitalist system spreads
from Europe,North America and North East Asia to the rest of the world. But the physical world, the environment
in which we make our lives, is in crisis, most clearly seen in huge losses of biodiversity and in climate change.

This essay is my attempt to puzzle out the conflict between these two worlds and their implications for the future. I have
also found it impossible to resist the opportunity to proffer some solutions to the problems I see.

I have not provided footnotes to back up facts or assertions - this is not an academic work but the reflections of a
participant in the drama. I do not have the academic and scientific qualifications that ideally would be applied to
consideration of such important issues but I do have the responsibility of my position, a keen interest in history and,
like you, a personal stake in its outcome.

pdf_sm_whLumberjacks in Eden (full article)

###

 
Print
Monday, December 29, 2008

The Whalers are a Bunch of Arrogant Lying Wankers

Captain Watson Responds to West Australian Story

The West Australian: Whalers claim Sea Shepherd is not stopping whale cull 29th December 2008, 11:00 WST

http://www.thewest.com.au/default.aspx?MenuID=28&ContentID=115214

The body responsible for the Japanese whaling fleet's annual whale cull has described the conservation group Sea Shepherd as a "mere sand fly bite" and say this season's slaughter of whales has not been slowed by the presence of anti-whaling activists.

Captain Paul Watson: If we were mere sand flies, they would not be running from us. They have fled over 1200 miles with us on their tail. They must be allergic to sand flies I suppose. Their whaling activities have not only been slowed, we have stopped all whaling by Japanese whalers since December 20th.

Read more...
 
More Articles...


P.O. Box 2616, Friday Harbor, WA 98250
(USA) Tel: 360-370-5650   Fax: 360-370-5651

All contents copyright ©2008 Sea Shepherd Conservation Society
Hosting and other web services donated by EStreet

Home     |     Site Map     |     Privacy Policy     |     Copyright     |     Contact