News
2010
Sep 06
Greenpeace duo gets suspended jail in Japan whale meat case
A Japanese court Monday sentenced two Greenpeace activists to suspended one-year jail terms for stealing a box of whale meat that the environmentalists said was proof of embezzlement in "research whaling".
Junichi Sato, 33, and Toru Suzuki, 43, were found guilty of theft and trespass by the Aomori district court and were each sentenced to a one-year jail term, which was suspended for three years, Greenpeace said.
"Despite the sentences being suspended, it was wholly disproportionate given that the two acted in the public interest and not for personal gain," said Greenpeace spokesman Greg McNevin from the northern port city.
"It will have a chilling effect on activists exposing wrongdoing in Japan," he said, adding that Greenpeace believes the sentence also contravenes international human rights laws guaranteeing freedom of speech.
The two activists admit they stole a box of salted whale meat, but pleaded not guilty because they said they acted in the public interest to highlight alleged embezzlement in Japan's "research whaling" programme.
Commercial whaling was banned worldwide in 1986, but Japan set up the non-profit Institute of Cetacean Research the following year and has since culled hundreds of the ocean mammals annually in the name of science.
The two activists said they were contacted over two years ago by a whistle-blower, a veteran crew member of a state-sponsored whaling ship, who told them he was dismayed by what he saw as corruption and waste.
His fellow crewmen were receiving boxes of whale meat, often mislabelled as personal belongings, at their homes after they returned from their annual Antarctic hunts, the unidentified whaler said, according to Greenpeace.
Sato and Suzuki followed the trail to the depot of a courier company in Aomori, where Suzuki on April 16, 2008 took a 23-kilogram (50-pound) box labelled "cardboard and vinyl", which was filled with whale meat.
They later handed the box to Tokyo District Prosecutors and called a press conference to publicise what they saw as evidence of graft. Officials explained the crew members were receiving boxes of whale meat as "souvenirs".
On June 20, police arrested Sato and Suzuki, and in a dramatic operation also raided Greenpeace's Tokyo office and the homes of five staff members, seizing computer hard drives and boxes of documents.
While the embezzlement case was dropped on the day of the arrests, the two activists were taken to Aomori and held for 26 days, interrogated three times a day strapped to chairs without their lawyers present, Greenpeace said.
In court, prosecutors argued the activists had broken the law and may do so again, were self-righteous and had shown no remorse, also citing financial losses to a courier company employee and damage to the firm's reputation.
Greenpeace has condemned what it calls a "political trial" and the treatment of its members, whom it has dubbed the "Tokyo Two". Greenpeace members have rallied at several Japanese embassies worldwide to show their solidarity.
Greenpeace executive director Kumi Naidoo, a former anti-apartheid activist from South Africa, last week said the treatment of Sato and Suzuki "reminds me of the way that the apartheid system treated those that tried to oppose it."
"Greenpeace will continue pursuing the wrongdoing of research whaling," Greenpeace Japan said in a statement issued Monday after the verdict.
Junichi Sato, 33, and Toru Suzuki, 43, were found guilty of theft and trespass by the Aomori district court and were each sentenced to a one-year jail term, which was suspended for three years, Greenpeace said.
"Despite the sentences being suspended, it was wholly disproportionate given that the two acted in the public interest and not for personal gain," said Greenpeace spokesman Greg McNevin from the northern port city.
"It will have a chilling effect on activists exposing wrongdoing in Japan," he said, adding that Greenpeace believes the sentence also contravenes international human rights laws guaranteeing freedom of speech.
The two activists admit they stole a box of salted whale meat, but pleaded not guilty because they said they acted in the public interest to highlight alleged embezzlement in Japan's "research whaling" programme.
Commercial whaling was banned worldwide in 1986, but Japan set up the non-profit Institute of Cetacean Research the following year and has since culled hundreds of the ocean mammals annually in the name of science.
The two activists said they were contacted over two years ago by a whistle-blower, a veteran crew member of a state-sponsored whaling ship, who told them he was dismayed by what he saw as corruption and waste.
His fellow crewmen were receiving boxes of whale meat, often mislabelled as personal belongings, at their homes after they returned from their annual Antarctic hunts, the unidentified whaler said, according to Greenpeace.
Sato and Suzuki followed the trail to the depot of a courier company in Aomori, where Suzuki on April 16, 2008 took a 23-kilogram (50-pound) box labelled "cardboard and vinyl", which was filled with whale meat.
They later handed the box to Tokyo District Prosecutors and called a press conference to publicise what they saw as evidence of graft. Officials explained the crew members were receiving boxes of whale meat as "souvenirs".
On June 20, police arrested Sato and Suzuki, and in a dramatic operation also raided Greenpeace's Tokyo office and the homes of five staff members, seizing computer hard drives and boxes of documents.
While the embezzlement case was dropped on the day of the arrests, the two activists were taken to Aomori and held for 26 days, interrogated three times a day strapped to chairs without their lawyers present, Greenpeace said.
In court, prosecutors argued the activists had broken the law and may do so again, were self-righteous and had shown no remorse, also citing financial losses to a courier company employee and damage to the firm's reputation.
Greenpeace has condemned what it calls a "political trial" and the treatment of its members, whom it has dubbed the "Tokyo Two". Greenpeace members have rallied at several Japanese embassies worldwide to show their solidarity.
Greenpeace executive director Kumi Naidoo, a former anti-apartheid activist from South Africa, last week said the treatment of Sato and Suzuki "reminds me of the way that the apartheid system treated those that tried to oppose it."
"Greenpeace will continue pursuing the wrongdoing of research whaling," Greenpeace Japan said in a statement issued Monday after the verdict.
Source: channelnewsasia.com
Other News by Category
General Shipping & Maritime
-
Alarm cleared over sea ice off China coast
-
Swansea-Cork ferry service to close
-
Tamil migrant boat MV Ocean Lady sold at steep discount
-
Concordia passengers, experts dissect cruise ship disaster
-
Ship scrapping industry coming to historic dock
-
More Containers Removed from Rena Wreck
-
Maritime Connector – looking back on 2011
-
Gulf sets plan for Hormuz closure
-
MOL to Scrap 5 Double Hull Tankers
-
Cruise Ship Sinking: Costa Concordia Crew Sues Carnival for $100M
Safety & Piracy
-
Bodies pulled from water after PNG ferry accident
-
Ferry runs aground in Italy snow storm, 260 rescued
-
Papua New Guinea ferry: Fears grow for 100 missing
-
Gas leak cargo ship set to enter Darwin Harbour
-
Cruise passenger airlifted off ship
-
Italy Asks Somalia for Help to Free Hijacked Ship
-
Dozens feared dead after Papua New Guinea ferry sinks
-
Costa Concordia: authorities end search for bodies on stricken cruise ship
-
Mediterranean The Deadliest Sea For Refugees & Migrants - UN
-
Nine crew missing after freighter sinks off Turkish coast
Offshore, Oil & Gas
-
Charles Hendry: North Sea oil industry in independent Scotland risks EU meddling
-
Testing out LNG on Northern Sea Route
-
Underwater oil rig 'factories' planned to beat catastrophic Arctic ice storms
-
Transpetro Reports Oil Spill at Terminal Osorio in Tramandai, Brazil
-
Gazprom and Sovcomflot to arrange test LNG shipment via Northern Sea Route soon
-
Iraq urges Iran to keep its oil flowing through Gulf waterway
-
Iran stores more oil at sea as trade pressure grows
-
Norway's Statoil makes 'substantial oil discovery' in the Barents sea
-
Oil tanker transfer hit by weather again
-
Oil tanker cargo transfer begins in Belfast Lough
Port & Shipbuilding
-
First local cruise ship set for maiden voyage
-
Port of Kiel gets container wayport status
-
China ministry says to bar giant ships from ports
-
BLRT Grupp delivered another gas-powered ferry
-
Rosetti Marino Delivers PSV ‘F.D. Remarkable’ to Fratelli D’Amato
-
Damen to build two ‘Green’ tugs for Iskes
-
Kuwait to purchase nine oil tankers
-
Smit acquires its first ‘Rotor Tugs’
-
Russia scraps three nuclear icebreakers
-
P&O receives £150m Channel ferry
Environment & Technology
-
Oil spreads from wreck of ship off Italian coast, but extent of spillage is unclear
-
Ocean noise pollution
-
Countries adopt UN-backed declaration to protect marine environment
-
More oil spills from Christmas Island ship wreck
-
Kite propulsion powers French fishermen
-
BC Ferries looks to ditch diesel, convert fleet to liquefied natural gas
-
Going, going, gone! Salvage teams dismantle 330ft cargo ship which ran aground in northern France in just one month
-
2012 Leading Edge Green Vessels
-
Bigger Canal + Bigger Ships = Less Pollution?
-
Officials Confirm Light Fuel Near Ship
National (Croatian)
-
Šokantna ispovijest Hrvata kojeg su oteli pirati
-
Vlada: Imenovani pomoćnici ministra i upravna vijeća lučkih uprava Rijeka, Zadar, Šibenik i Ploče
-
Prodaja "3. maja" i "Kraljevice" upitna zbog cijene koncesijske naknade
-
Razvoj riječke luke otvara 9.230 radnih mjesta
-
'EU će pozorno pratiti rekonstruiranje brodogradilišta u RH'
-
Prazna blagajna: MORH odbio njemačke brodove
-
Muzejska podmornica iz Lore - tajno oružje Slovenije
-
DIV nastavlja pregovore za kupnju Brodosplita; Čačić se sastao i s Končarom
-
Novi rekord prometa preko Jadrana
-
Stečaj nad Mediteranskom plovidbom