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SCUBA DIVING PAGE ONE :: WORLD NEWS :: ECO

Paul Watson vs Barb Burstyn

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BARB BURSTYN

Barbara Burstyn

Anti-whaling fanatic fighting yesterday's battle
by Barbara S. Burstyn

Some issues are so black and white they are never examined, let alone criticised. Like whaling. It's obvious that every pro-whaler is bad and all anti-whalers are good.

That's why when a guy like Paul Watson, the icon of anti-whalers, drops anchor in Auckland Harbour we welcome him unquestioningly.

Watson, who describes his conservation group, Sea Shepherd, as a self-appointed policing organisation for whalekind, is famous for his Robin Hood-like tactics.

To make sure whalers and any fisherman breaking Sea Shepherd's rules get the message, he sails up close, flouting international sailing conventions, and declares them under arrest.

When they ignore him, he begins his campaign of harassment, including water cannons, firing gunpowder and his piece de resistance, the "can-opener", a tool apparently capable of ripping open the steel hulls of ships.

The technique has led to many boat sinkings and a number of close calls for sailors.

Excuse me, but am I missing something here?

Here's a known saboteur, a man the Norwegians call a terrorist and whose organisation is said to have solid links to the frightening Animal Liberation Front and whose activities come under the FBI's animal enterprise terrorism watch, floating happily in Auckland Harbour.

As if that isn't enough, Watson has been branded a blatant racist by native people across North America - not only for his attempts to stop the legal capture of a grey whale by the Makah Indian tribe but for his writings, where, using discredited and racist anthropological models, he argues racism is a mere "human triviality".

Then there are the criminal convictions. Watson, who claims he speaks on behalf of the Cetacean nation, has served time in several foreign prisons.

A court in The Netherlands sentenced him to 120 days of unconditional imprisonment for trying to scuttle a whaling vessel in 1992.

He has been charged with criminal damage after steering another of his ships into a Coastguard vessel in 1994, and he has been accused of transmitting false alarm signals and of illegal entry into Norwegian territorial waters.

He has had multiple arrests on criminal mischief charges and recently faced attempted murder charges and criminal charges for ramming a Costa Rican fishing boat.

With such a list of unlawful activity, the presence on board of a "powder" used to fire his deck-mounted cannon, not to mention his tools designed to sink another vessel, it seems remarkable that the New Zealand immigration authorities have turned a blind eye to him and the Auckland police have done no more than pay a cursory visit.

But, you reason, he is saving the whales. Well, that may not be all it seems, either.

A few decades ago, Watson's crusade made sense. Commercial whaling had devastated many whale breeds, pushing some to the point of extinction.

But today the United States National Marine Fisheries Service estimates there are more than two million sperm whales worldwide.

The International Whaling Commission calculated years ago that there were more than 900,000 minke whales and 780,000 pilot whales worldwide, and the numbers are higher now.

Milton Freeman, a whaling expert at the University of Alberta, estimates the number of minke whales has trebled over 30 years and humpback numbers are exploding at a rate of between 12 and 17 per cent a year.

And the Makah hunt Watson tried to shut down? That's been a part of the culture for 2000 years. Deeply embedded in spiritual and cultural traditions, the Makahs' carefully managed hunt poses no threat whatsoever to the conservation of the Pacific grey whale as their own rules forbid the killing of more than 20 whales every five years (or an average of four whales a year) from a stock estimated at around 20,000.

Writing in the New York Times, Nicholas D. Kristof commented that while most large whales remain at risk, for some species we can no longer argue that we need to "save the whales". They have been saved.

He added that whales now eat at least 300 million tonnes of marine life, three times as much as humans, and there is speculation that rising numbers of minke whales may be holding down the population of blue whales that compete for similar food.

So is Paul Watson really the Robin Hood of conservation? I don't think so.

Watson's crusade is not about the protection of endangered species. It is about one obsessive man with a cause. Certainly it is a cause that wins the feel-good prize, but one that ultimately doesn't stack up.

And even if it did have merit beyond our romantic need to feel connected to another species, his actions are still criminal. Imagine if Watson was using New Zealand as his base for other terrorist activity, say blowing up buildings, would we have welcomed him to our shores?

Under the spurious cover of animal rights, we seem to have suspended our common sense and allowed this extremist to set up shop in Auckland Harbour, trading his propaganda, touting for new recruits and planning his next attack.

So think about it. Does the end justify his means? And should those of us who nonetheless support that end ignore the means of a fanatic who believes animals have equal rights with humans and is willing to go to any lengths to promote his cause?

Minke sushi anyone?

CDNN Editor's note: According to our search of the New Zealand Herald's archives, this is Ms Burstyn's first foray into the difficult and often contentious realm of environmental issues.

Until the arrival of Captain Watson and crew in New Zealand where preparations are underway to confront Japan's South Pacific whaling fleet, Ms. Burstyn somehow managed to ignore the plight of the New Zealand's North Island Hector's dolphin and many other serious national and international environmental issues.

Instead Ms. Burstyn preferred to write about "fountain of youth" hormone drugs for women, sperm banks, movies, child-rearing, horse urine and other issues of importance primarily to white, middle-class female suburbanites.

 

PAUL WATSON

Captain Paul Watson

The 'anti-whaling fanatic' responds
by Captain Paul Watson

On September 3, the Herald published an opinion piece about me by Barbara Sumner Burstyn entitled "Anti-whaling fanatic fighting yesterday's battle".

It was an easy research project for Ms Sumner Burstyn. She simply had to go to the website of the World Council of Whalers, a group funded by the Japanese and Norwegian whaling industries, to get the so-called "facts".

The column was based on distortions, misinformation, and outright fabrications, which I would like to challenge.

The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society does not protest whaling. We oppose illegal whaling operations. Japan is openly violating the moratorium on commercial whaling and DNA evidence has proved conclusively that whale meat from endangered species is being sold in Japan.

The Sea Shepherd Society has never sunk a ship on the high seas, and we have never caused an injury or a death. Yes, we did sink two ships in Iceland, and I turned myself into the police in Reykjavik afterwards. I was not charged, however, because to do so would have put Iceland on trial for illegal whaling in the court of international opinion and they knew that.

The accusation that I am a terrorist is absurd. I travel freely on a Canadian passport, and am a legal resident of the United States.

I have never been convicted of a felony anywhere in the world, and the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society is a registered charitable organisation in the United States and Europe. We have absolutely no links with the so-called Animal Liberation Front, and we are not being watched, nor are we listed as a threat, by the FBI.

In fact, I was presented with the President George Bush Daily Point of Light Award in 1999, and I was recognised as one of the environmental heroes of the 20th Century by Time magazine.

Sea Shepherd's official spokesperson is actor Martin Sheen (star of the television series "The West Wing"). Our Board of Directors includes a lawyer, a UCLA science professor, a Los Angeles trauma surgeon, and television actor Richard Dean Anderson ("McGyver"). Our Board of Advisors includes New Zealand photographer Tui De Roy, Dr Louise Leakey, Dr Roger Payne, Dr Birute Galdikas, Australian philospher Peter Singer, and actors Pierce Brosnan, James Cromwell, Rutger Hauer, and Linda Blair. Would these people be involved with a terrorist organisation?

The accusation that the Dutch sentenced me to 120 days in prison is also false. I was arrested in the Netherlands in 1997, and spent 80 days awaiting judgment on an extradition request by Norway. Norway was denied the request and I was freed. I was never in violation of Dutch law.

As for Norway, they sentenced me to 120 days in prison without giving me the right to a trial. This issue has been resolved. I have papers from the Norwegian Ministry of Justice stating that there is no longer any demand for my arrest. I am quite free to travel to Norway or anywhere else for that matter.

I was charged by Canada in 1993 with chasing Cuban and Spanish drag trawlers off the Grand Banks of Newfoundland, even though it was outside Canada's 200-mile limit. I was acquitted on the charges and a year later the Canadian Minister of Fisheries sent his ships to do exactly the same thing.

I was never charged with ramming a Norwegian Coast Guard vessel as the writer claims. Nor was I ever charged with "attempted murder" by Costa Rica. Perhaps if the writer had bothered to contact the Ministry of the Environment or the Coast Guard in Costa Rica, she would have discovered that Sea Shepherd is working in partnership with the Costa Rican government to protect Cocos Island National Park.

We are also working in partnership with the Galapagos National Park where one of our ships is jointly crewed by Sea Shepherd volunteers, National Park rangers, and officers of the Ecuadorian Navy.

My only criminal convictions were for documenting the Canadian seal hunt. (It is a crime in Canada to witness or document the killing of a seal.) These were minor charges.

Our record is well documented. The false accusations and misinformation being distributed by the World Council of Whalers is part of a disinformation service they have been providing on behalf of the Japanese whaling industry for years.

Ms Sumner Burstyn describes Sea Shepherd as a self-appointed policing organisation. This is not the case. Our activities are authorised by the United Nations World Charter for Nature which states that individuals and non-governmental organisations are authorised to uphold international conservation law.

Section 24 states: "each person has a duty to act in accordance with the provisions of the present charter; acting individually, in association with others or through participation in the political process, each person shall strive to ensure that the objectives and the requirements of the present Charter are met."

One of those objectives is the enforcement of laws in international waters as in Charter Section 21(e) "safeguard and conserve nature in areas beyond national jurisdiction".

It is precisely this charter that I used in my defence for protecting the Newfoundland Grand Banks. I set a precedent in Canadian law in 1995 because I was acquitted by virtue of colour of right by acting in accordance with the Charter.

The charges of racism in the column are also ludicrous. Am I a racist to oppose illegal whaling by indigenous people? I have never opposed legally sanctioned Inuit whaling in Alaska and Russia, although in 1981 we were active in Siberia in opposing illegal Soviet whaling.

I would in fact be a racist if I did not oppose an illegal activity because the perpetrators were non-white.

As for being anti-native, I was a volunteer medic for the American Indian Movement during the occupation of Wounded Knee in 1973 and I put my ship at the disposal of Canadian Indians in 1991 to blockade the Columbus re-enactment caravels near Puerto Rico. I am presently working with Indian groups in British Columbia to oppose salmon farming that threatens their fishing rights. One accusation that your columnist made about me is true. I believe that all whaling is bad and all anti-whalers are good. I will go a step further and say that whaling is an obscenity and it should be ended completely by all people everywhere.

As for minke sushi, I would like to remind Barbara Sumner Burstyn that eating whale meat is illegal in New Zealand, and if she wishes to eat whale, I'm sure the Japanese would be very willing to serve her jaded palate with their contraband delicacy, but she will have to go to Tokyo.

 

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