OUR PLANET’S approach to whale conservation has been on sorry display in the waters around Antarctica.
Massive Japanese ships plow through the frigid waters of the Southern Ocean, harpooning minke whales and dragging their bleeding bodies aboard to be butchered for consumption back home. Exploiting a loophole in a toothless international moratorium on commercial whaling, the Japanese claim their boats are conducting “scientific research.’’
In these same waters, much smaller ships try to stop the Japanese. They call themselves the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, and their goal is to harass, frustrate, and embarrass the whalers. Flying a modified Jolly Roger - with the crossbones replaced by a trident and shepherd’s crook - they lob stink bombs, tangle the whaling boats’ propellers, and generally make it difficult for them to work. Three Australian Sea Shepherd activists recently boarded one of the vessels, setting off a diplomatic row that was resolved when the Japanese finally agreed to release them last week.
