Sea Shepherd Ship Escapes from South Africa
Farley Mowat , the flagship of Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, managed to escape South African detention today under
the cover of night. The Canadian-registered marine wildlife conservation ship slipped out of Cape Town Harbor after
months of unsuccessful efforts to get the South African Marine Safety Association (SAMSA) to lift a politically
motivated detention order imposed on the ship when it returned from pursuing the Japanese whaling fleet in Antarctic
waters.
The Farley Mowat, under the command of Dutch Captain Alex Cornelissen, is preparing to return to the Antarctic Whale
Sanctuary in December to once again intervene against illegal Japanese whaling operations. Japan is using their economic
muscle to instigate harassment of the Sea Shepherd ship.
Meanwhile, Sea Shepherd has discovered that Japan illegally transships whale meat in and out of Cape Town. "Japan has
influence in Cape Town," said Captain Paul Watson. "We have experienced that influence and we have been very
disappointed that South African harbor authorities have seen fit to harass people who simply want to save the whales. We
have operated the Farley Mowat since 1996 and we have never received the level of harassment that we experienced after
intervening against illegal Japanese whaling."
Japan is exerting their influence in other arenas as well, spending millions of dollars bribing nations to vote to
overturn the global moratorium on whaling. Japan is intent upon returning to Antarctica in December to kill over a
thousand whales including the endangered humpback and fin whales.
The International Whaling Commission meeting begins on Friday, June 16th, in St. Kitts & Nevis in the Caribbean. Japan will attempt to legalize their whaling activities at this meeting with the help of new
member nations they have brought into the IWC to vote against the whales and for the whalers.
The South African authorities insisted upon commercial certificates for the Farley Mowat which is registered as a yacht.
According to SAMSA bureaucrat Saleem Modak, Sea Shepherd's interfering with the illegal slaughter of whales is a
commercial activity. Since the Farley Mowat is not registered as a commercial ship the production of commercial
certificates presented a catch-22 situation that could not be resolved.
"We may have burned our bridges with South Africa ," said Captain Alex Cornelissen, "but this country has disappointed
us by siding with the whalers over the whales. We could not allow them to detain us as the Japanese prepare their
harpoons for another season of relentless cruel slaughter. We can't waste any further time dealing with bought and paid
for bureaucrats – we have whales to save."
END