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Monday, 17 December, 2001, 09:47 GMT
Whalers battle protesters
Japanese crew members use water cannons to disperse Greenpeace activists in the freezing waters of the Antarctic
Greenpeace says the whaling is for profit, not science
Japanese whalers have used high-powered water cannons to fight off two inflatable Greenpeace boats that were chasing them in Antarctic waters, the environmental group said.


We watched the whalers chase the whale for more than 40 minutes, repeatedly firing its harpoon and missing up to five times - finally, they hit it with the sixth harpoon

Helicopter pilot Phil Robinson
Greenpeace said the two inflatable boats, from its ship the MV Arctic Sunrise, were trying to stop the Japanese whalers from loading a dead minke whale on to their factory ship, Nisshin Maru.

The whalers then aimed water cannons at the boat drivers, placing them in danger of being knocked overboard into the icy waters, Greenpeace said in a statement.

Japan's Institute of Cetacean Research said the Greenpeace activists were "no more than eco-terrorists". It called the environmental group's attempts to disrupt the research whaling program "a publicity stunt."

'No threat'

"This is a malicious and reckless threat to the lives and safety of the vessel's crew and scientists," General Seiji Ohsumi, Institute director, said in a statement.

Japanese whaler eating whale meat, AP
Whale meat is a delicacy in Japan

He said the research program, which plans to capture some 440 minke whales, did not threaten the Antarctic whale stock.

A helicopter pilot with Greenpeace said he had rare film footage of a vessel harpooning a whale after a 40-minute chase.

"We watched the whalers chase the whale for more than 40 minutes, repeatedly firing its harpoon and missing up to five times," said helicopter pilot Phil Robinson.

"Finally, they hit it with the sixth harpoon."

'Purely for profit'

A Greenpeace crew member, Japanese campaigner Yuko Hirono, rejected the government's claim that the minkes were being hunted for scientific purposes.

"There is nothing scientific about this whaling," she told the environmental group's Sydney offices from the Arctic Sunrise.

"Once the whalers found open water they set to with a determination to catch every whale in the area. This is commercial whaling, purely for profit."

Ms Hirono called on Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi to stop the government pretending that it was allowing whaling for legitimate research.

"The world knows this is not science," she said. "It is purely the Fisheries Agency's way to continue whaling against the wishes of the international community," she said.

See also:

14 Dec 01 | Asia-Pacific
Greenpeace disrupts Japan whalers
06 Nov 01 | Asia-Pacific
Japanese whalers prepare for hunt
04 Oct 01 | Sci/Tech
Whaling 'safe for a century'
27 Jul 01 | Sci/Tech
Green group backs limited whale hunt
26 Jul 01 | Sci/Tech
Whaling ban survives intact
23 Jul 01 | Sci/Tech
Battle looms over whaling ban
18 Jul 01 | Asia-Pacific
Japan admits trading whale votes
06 Jul 01 | Sci/Tech
'End whaling ban for whales' sake'
17 Nov 00 | Americas
Japanese whalers sail despite row
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