Japan has ordered the release of two activists detained when they
boarded one of its harpoon vessels in Antarctica to deliver an
anti-whaling protest, Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said
Wednesday.
Paul Watson, the captain of the Steve Irwin protest ship, said the
conditions set for the release of Australia Benjamin Potts, 28, and
British national Giles Lane, 35, were unacceptable.
"They are saying we have to agree to not take any action against
the whaling activities, not to video or photo their whaling activities,
... which I'm not going to do," Watson told Australia's AAP news
agency.
Watson alleged the pair were assaulted and held above decks on the
Yushin Maru 2 for two and a half-hours in freezing weather before being
taken below.
"When you hold hostages and make demands, that's the definition of
a terrorist organization and that's the way they are acting," Watson
charged. "We're not going to cease and desist from interfering in their
illegal whaling activities as a condition."
Smith said neither captain should set conditions on the transfer of Potts and Lane.
"Japan has given us assurances that the two will be released and returned to their ship," Smith said.
The five-vessel fleet left Japan in November with the intention of
returning with 935 minke whales and 50 fin whales. Initially, 50
humpbacks were to be taken as well, but this part of the catch is in
abeyance after Australia and New Zealand led an international protest.
Glenn Inwood - spokesman for the Institute of Cetacean Research, a
Japanese whaling organization - said the pair had been tied up to
restrain them after a failed attempt to foul the propeller. He
described the accusation that they had been assaulted as "absolute
lies."
The new Australian government led by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has
been accused of talking tough on Japan's annual whale hunt but doing
little to stop it.
An Australian ship, the Oceanic Viking, left Perth last week on a 20-day mission to monitor the Japanese ships.
Watson called the Oceanic Viking a "ghost ship" because it hadn't
approached the Japanese despite being given the coordinates of the
fleet's location by the protestors.