Alphabetical           State by State
 Science & Technology Add/Modify your site link! Send this page to a friend!  
 Home
 Computing
 Communications and Networking
 Contests
 Conventions and Conferences
 Desktop Publishing
 E Books
 Ethics
 Graphics
 Hardware
 History
 Indices
 Information and Documentation
 Information Media
 Internet and Intranet
 Internet
 Mobile Computing
 Multimedia
 Networking and Communications
 Newsgroups
 Operating Systems
 Organizations
 People
 Performance and Capacity
 Personal Computers
 Programming Languages
 Programming
 Publications
 Reviews and Guides
 Robotics
 Security and Encryption
 Software
 Speech Technology
 Standards
 Supercomputing and Parallel Computing
 Training
 Virtual Reality
 Year 2000 Problem
Copyright © 1998-01 OpenHere
Company Information
Suggest a Site
FAQ
VirtualDesk
Login:

Password:
Australia Calls for Restraint Between Whalers, Activists
Tuesday, March 25, 2008 2:06 PM

The Australian government has called on Japanese fishermen and international anti-whaling activists to exercise restraint after the latest confrontation between...


The Australian government has called on Japanese fishermen and international anti-whaling activists to exercise restraint after the latest confrontation between the two groups in Antarctic waters.

Captain Paul Patson holds what he claims is a bullet fired by Japanese Coast Guard and bent badge, 07 Mar 2008

Captain Paul Watson holds what he claims is a bullet fired by Japanese Coast Guard and bent badge, 07 Mar 2008

Anti-whaling activists Friday threw stink bombs and other objects onto the Japanese ship Nisshin Maru, as it continued its annual whaling expedition in the Southern Ocean. One anti-whaling activist, Paul Watson, says he was shot by a bullet from the Japanese ship during the clash.

Japan has denied the allegation. In a statement to the Australian Foreign Ministry, Japan's fisheries department says coast guard escorts on the whaling ship fired flash grenades, but no bullets.

The anti-whaling activists aboard Netherlands-based vessel, the Sea Shepherd, have been harassing Japanese whalers for weeks in an attempt to stop what they call a cruel industry.

Australia has promised to try to stop Japan's whaling program, but has avoided any confrontation with Japan on the issue.

Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura sharply criticized anti-whaling activists, saying that the stink bombs were in fact butyric acid, which stings the eyes. He told reporters that hurting people to protect whales was unforgivable.

Japan considers whaling a cultural tradition. It abandoned commercial whaling under international pressure in 1986. But using a loophole in the international moratorium, which allows whaling for scientific purposes, it kills up to one thousand whales a year.

Some information for this report was provided by AFP and Reuters.

Science & Technology

  • Science & Technology Home

  • Martian Dirt Could Yield Asparagus

  • Scientists Find First Physical Evidence Mars Could Support Life

  • US Company Launches Effort to Save Global Cocoa Crops  

  • Gates Steps Down from Microsoft to Guide Foundation  

  • An Individual's Carbon Footprint Can Be Measured on the Web  

  • British Consumers Learn to Make Diesel Fuel From Used Cooking Oil  

  • Scientists Confirm There is Ice on Mars  

  • Honey Bee Losses Still Increasing  

  • US Space Agency Believes It May Have Found Ice on Mars  

  • War Fatalities Three Times Higher than Acknowledged

  • Saharan Water Pipe Project Irrigates Desert  

  • US Ambassador Responds to South Korean Criticism Over Beef Controversy

  • Asia's Oceans Threatened by Over-Fishing  

  • US Botanic Garden Dedicates Annual Exhibit on Sustainability  

  • US Bill on Climate Change Blocked in Senate

  • Ethiopia Faces Worsening Food Shortage Until September Harvest

  • Many in China Want to Climb Mountains  

  • Egypt Tackles Pollution Problem in Small Steps  

  • Canadian Company Mines for Gold and Silver on Tribe's Ancestral Land in Philippines  

  • A New Wind Power Design Good For Rural And Urban Environments  

  • Community's Fight Over Lead Pollution Becomes Test of Thailand's Environmental Law  

  • Australian PM in Indonesia for Talks on Security, Environment  

  • Space Shuttle Discovery Returns to Earth

  • Mystery Object Spotted Near Space Shuttle Identified

  • Birdbath Green Bakery Helps Environment With Baked Goods  

  • Scientists Grow Plant From World's Oldest Seed

  • US Space Agency Plans Solar Probe  

  • 'Crazy' Ant Populations Threaten Texas Ecosystem  

  • NASA Launches Space Telescope

  • Discovery Astronauts Returning Home