Be calm, NZ tells whaling protesters
January 19 2007 at 11:49AM
Wellington - New Zealand Conservation Minister Chris Carter appealed on Friday for restraint as protesters prepared to challenge the Japanese whaling fleet in the Southern Ocean.
Japan plans to kill up to 935 Antarctic minke whales and 10 endangered fin whales in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary over the next few months during its 2007 so-called scientific whaling programme.
Carter said he was worried about the possibility of violence as the international environmental organization Greenpeace and Paul Watson, the radical president and founder of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, try to stop the Japanese whalers.
He said comments made by Watson about "battle modifications made to his ships" indicated that he was intent on having a violent confrontation with the Japanese whaling fleet.
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Carter also called on the Japanese to use restraint, saying the powerful water cannons they used against protest boats last year put lives at risk.
He said the Antarctic was one of the most dangerous and isolated places on the planet and the capacity for search and rescue operations in the region was very limited.
"I urge all parties to refrain from any acts that may be a risk to human life," Carter said.
"The best way of solving this issue would be for Japan to abandon whaling and join other nations in respecting and conserving marine species that could be facing extinction."-Sapa-dpa