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Sea Shepherd anti-whaling activists launch new 'Godzilla' speedboat
The Australia-flagged 100-foot stabilized monohull is imposing without being overly heavy, and will be fast enough to chase the Japanese.
Wed, Dec 01 2010 at 10:53 AM
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INCIDENT: Tensions ran high last season after a January 6 collision with a Japanese harpoon ship sliced off the front of the Ady Gil, a New Zealand-flagged trimaran. (Photo: ZUMA Press)
Militant anti-whaling campaigners said Wednesday they had launched a new "Godzilla" speedboat to chase Japanese harpooners hunting the giant mammals in Antarctic waters.
The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society this week unveiled its newest vessel "Gojira," as the giant monster Godzilla is known in Japan, some 11 months after its futuristic Ady Gil craft was lost in a high-seas clash with whalers.
The Australia-flagged 100-foot stabilized monohull is imposing without being overly heavy, and will be fast enough to chase the Japanese, the group's Australian director Jeff Hansen said.
"We are not going to release the speed (it can reach), we are just saying that it is going to go faster than a harpoon ship," he told AFP.
"This vessel is purely to be used for its speed advantage."
The black Gojira, which previously completed a round-the-world voyage in less than 80 days under the name Cable & Wireless Adventure, will join veteran Sea Shepherd ships the Bob Barker and the Steve Irwin on their annual southern hemisphere summer pursuit of the Japanese whalers.
Hansen said the two larger boats would leave Tasmania on Thursday, with the Gojira catching up with them several days later.
Sea Shepherd believes its activists will be leaving on the annual mission — which usually extends until about March — ahead of the Japanese boats for the first time ever.
"We're in a very, very good position right now," Hansen said. "We're the best prepared we've ever been."
Tensions ran high last season after a January 6 collision with a Japanese harpoon ship sliced off the front of the Ady Gil, a New Zealand-flagged trimaran.
A New Zealand inquiry found both vessels were at fault over the incident, which occurred as Sea Shepherd boats harassed Japanese harpooners and resulted in the Ady Gil sinking.
Hansen said Sea Shepherd had learned valuable lessons from the experience, adding that he hoped having an Australia-flagged ship involved in the campaign would push more action from Canberra on saving the whales.
Australia strongly opposes Japan's whaling and has started action against Tokyo in the International Court of Justice over its continued slaughter of the animals.
In the western Japanese port city of Shimonoseki, 24 pro-whaling countries and regions held a two-day meeting ending Wednesday to map out their joint campaign for resuming commercial whaling, government officials said.
"It is necessary to exchange views among countries supporting sustainable use of cetaceans based on scientific grounds," Jun Yamashita, a Japanese fisheries agency official, told the meeting in the "whaling" city.
The meeting came just ahead of this year's departure of Japanese whalers for Antarctic waters. News reports said Japan plans to deploy armed coastguards on board this year in case of attacks by anti-whaling activists.
Japan hunts whales in southern waters around Antarctica using a loophole in a 1986 international moratorium that allows "lethal research", but does not hide the fact that the meat is later sold in shops and restaurants.
Copyright 2010 AFP Global Edition
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The namesake of the destroyed trimaran is a wonderful man who also donated $50,000 in matching funds to Farm Sanctuary for their Adopt A Turkey campaign.
He finds all animals deserving of love and protection. What a hero!!