The oceans are under
assault. Plastic waste, chemicals, effluent and industrial pollution threatens
to suffocate the life out of the marine environment. Over fishing by floating
factories is decimating fish stocks and through the problem of by-catch;
dolphins, turtles, seabirds and a host of other species are being killed in the
nets. Sharks, the supposed super predators of the ocean, are having their
dorsal fins mercilessly hacked from their bodies and then thrown back into the
sea to drown in order to supply a nutritionally useless soup to the restaurant
tables of China and South East Asia on a scale that beggars belief. Illegal
fishing is rampant throughout the ocean threatening extinction for some species
and Whalers from Japan and Norway still ply their trade unencumbered by the
anger of people across the world. Many people are concerned about these outrages
and insist that something must be done, but what exactly. Well, some say we
should all gather together with painted placards and protest outside embassies
and national parliaments. Others suggest legal solutions should be pursued
through the courts and international organisations like the United Nations.
Others still, insist that we should all look to get involved personally and
organise things like beach clean ups or buy recycled boardshorts or hold
candlelight vigils for haddock. And others still, suggest that scientific
solutions should be investigated without delay, as only science can stop the
ensuing environmental massacre.
Such activities have their
place in the environmental activists tool kit but let’s face it; demonstrating,
holding prayer meetings or hiring a bunch of snazzy dressed lawyers rarely
achieves much. As for scientific solutions, well they might work for pollution
but what scientific breakthrough is going to stop a harpoon smacking into a
whales flesh or make a rich Chinese bloke turn his nose up at his shark’s fin
soup. Faced with such an onslaught; protests, boycotts, church raffles and
decade long law suits become nothing more than self righteous “ middle class”
smoke that actually obscures the damage that has and is still being done.
What’s needed is something far more meaningful and far more dangerous than many
of us would contemplate, something that many legal minds would call piracy.
Enter stage right, radical defender of the seas, troublemaker and
self-confessed pirate Paul Watson, co-founder of Sea Shepherd Conservation
Society.
Paul Watson, who likes to be
called Capt. Paul Watson, (wow what an ego) was a founding member of Greenpeace but disagreed
with the way the organisation was heading and was ousted from the organisation
in 1977. Soon after he co-founded the Sea Shepherd Society. The Society’s
mission was to take the fight direct to those who were committing the offending
acts that so many environmentalists complain about but yet do nothing
themselves to stop.
He
successfully led campaigns against the seal hunting trade, exposed the
massacre of dolphins in Taiji and in the 1990’s used his ship to ram and sink
twelve Japanese whalers. Sea Shepherd still undertakes annual operations against whaling activities in the Antarctica.
There are those, including the Greenpeace Foundation, who condemn Watson and
Sea Shepherd, calling them violent, but Watson is unrepentant.
“Pirates get things done
without bureaucratic red tape… Yes, we be proud pirates, however we are
disciplined pirates with our own special code of honour. That code demands that
we do not cause injury or death to our enemies… We operate within the framework
of international conservation law meaning that we only oppose unlawful
exploitation of marine life… We do not target legitimate operations, even if we
disagree with them. We are not a protest organisation, we don’t hang banners,
we intervene against illegalities.”
Watson cites the United
Nations World Charter for Conservation, which he says, allows for
nongovernmental organisations to intervene in order to uphold international
law. “We have been called vigilantes. And indeed, we are vigilantes, because
when the law exists but enforcement does not, a vacuum is created that allows
for the actions of vigilantism…”
The activities of Sea
Shepherd have not just invoked commendation from what Watson calls the green
crowd of protestors, banner wavers and lobbyists. The Japanese government is a
particularly fervent critic as are other governments and global companies who
have labelled Watson and Sea Shepherd as eco-terrorists. Watson’s activities
have led to more than a few brushes with the law too. In 2002, after being
invited to lead a fight against over-fishing by the Costa Rican Government,
Watson boarded a vessel suspected of illegal fishing and escorted it to
harbour. On arrival however, it was the Sea Shepherd crew that were arrested.
Many believe that the crew of the fishing vessel had friends in high places.
Fearing an unfair trial – being self professed pirates probably wouldn’t have helped
- Watson and his crew fled. Watson was arrested ten years later in Frankfurt in
relation to the Costa Rica incident, but skipped bail before he could be
extradited. He therefore appears to remain a wanted man yet
seems unfazed about court action against him in the US and other jurisdictions,
and the more whalers, sealers and illegal fisherman rail against him the more
he believes he’s winning.
“The more enemies we recruit from that crowd of ecological criminals, the more successful and credible we become.”
It was rebuke that Paul Watson savaged with
buccaneering style by replying: “Since World War II, the Sea Shepherd
Conservation Society has boarded more ships, rammed more ships, engaged in more
high seas confrontations and sunk more ships than the Canadian Navy. They are
hardly in a position to presume to judge what we are competent or capable of
doing.”
No one apart from the Japanese and Norwegians seem to think that whaling is acceptable and the slaughter of dolphins in Taiji, Japan, is as pointless as it is sickening. So whether you agree or not with Paul Watson and his Society’s methods there is no doubt that he has shown a courage and commitment that few of his fellow environmentalists have. In truth while illegal fishing is rampant, whilst the Japanese still pretend that slaughtering whales on mass is necessary for scientific research (seriously how many whales do you have to kill before you work out what a whale is?) and Sharks are killed in their millions for their fins whilst all the while the United Nations, national navies and law enforcement agencies the world over sit by and do nothing, we need Paul Watson. We need the volunteers of Sea Shepherd and thousands more like them.
“The more enemies we recruit from that crowd of ecological criminals, the more successful and credible we become.”
And successful they have
become, Sea Shepherds activities and adventures are posted all over the web,
they’ve had their own television series called Whale Wars and have stopped the
issue of whaling from falling off the more mainstream environmental agenda. In
1998 they even planned to use a submarine in their actions against whalers, an
idea that prompted the Canadian Navy to rebuke the organisation publicly by
saying: “no one at Sea Shepherd know anything about operating a submarine and
it is ridiculous for Sea Shepherd to acquire one.”
No one apart from the Japanese and Norwegians seem to think that whaling is acceptable and the slaughter of dolphins in Taiji, Japan, is as pointless as it is sickening. So whether you agree or not with Paul Watson and his Society’s methods there is no doubt that he has shown a courage and commitment that few of his fellow environmentalists have. In truth while illegal fishing is rampant, whilst the Japanese still pretend that slaughtering whales on mass is necessary for scientific research (seriously how many whales do you have to kill before you work out what a whale is?) and Sharks are killed in their millions for their fins whilst all the while the United Nations, national navies and law enforcement agencies the world over sit by and do nothing, we need Paul Watson. We need the volunteers of Sea Shepherd and thousands more like them.
Some of you out there may be
content to paint catchy slogans on placards and hang banners from bridges. You
might even prefer to hold a jumble sale or hold an all night candlelight vigil
in the hope that such demonstrations might prick the conscience of hardened
whalers or stop illegal fishing. We however are slapping on the eye patches and
raising our frothing glasses in salute to Paul Watson and all the souls in Sea
Shepherd. Hoist the Jolly Roger me hearties
Argggh!
More information on Sea Shepherd is readily available on the web. However we’ve added some pertinent links below. You can sponsor Sea Shepherd directly via their website click here. The more adventurous amongst you might even want to volunteer for active service in one of their many operations or simply help out in their onshore activities if so click here.
More information on Sea Shepherd is readily available on the web. However we’ve added some pertinent links below. You can sponsor Sea Shepherd directly via their website click here. The more adventurous amongst you might even want to volunteer for active service in one of their many operations or simply help out in their onshore activities if so click here.
The Taiji dolphin slaughter
video – caution graphic content
Whale Wars on Youtube
Sea Shepherd in Paul
Watson’s own words
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