Berliner Boersenzeitung - Greenland court extends detention of anti-whaling activist Watson

EUR -
AED 4.0853
AFN 77.304935
ALL 99.425443
AMD 430.640141
ANG 2.0056
AOA 1030.326739
ARS 1068.290213
AUD 1.649014
AWG 2.002068
AZN 1.894175
BAM 1.956874
BBD 2.246933
BDT 132.982961
BGN 1.955109
BHD 0.419049
BIF 3218.88113
BMD 1.11226
BND 1.441091
BOB 7.717234
BRL 6.126886
BSD 1.11271
BTN 93.21276
BWP 14.749092
BYN 3.64147
BYR 21800.300671
BZD 2.242929
CAD 1.511489
CDF 3192.187171
CHF 0.939754
CLF 0.037189
CLP 1026.173446
CNY 7.889821
CNH 7.894912
COP 4701.557395
CRC 577.164769
CUC 1.11226
CUP 29.474896
CVE 110.725097
CZK 25.154429
DJF 197.670788
DKK 7.461765
DOP 66.891993
DZD 147.145288
EGP 53.86567
ERN 16.683904
ETB 126.732832
FJD 2.46466
FKP 0.847052
GBP 0.842148
GEL 3.003338
GGP 0.847052
GHS 17.483306
GIP 0.847052
GMD 77.857931
GNF 9621.051255
GTQ 8.607723
GYD 232.817735
HKD 8.668745
HNL 27.598894
HRK 7.56227
HTG 146.637268
HUF 394.090518
IDR 17094.661281
ILS 4.165854
IMP 0.847052
INR 93.266636
IQD 1457.826046
IRR 46831.717491
ISK 152.302078
JEP 0.847052
JMD 174.945984
JOD 0.788263
JPY 156.4327
KES 143.481939
KGS 94.173739
KHR 4532.460805
KMF 492.453354
KPW 1001.033584
KRW 1468.249939
KWD 0.339172
KYD 0.927409
KZT 535.105474
LAK 24586.51271
LBP 99658.517708
LKR 336.084392
LRD 216.835034
LSL 19.658686
LTL 3.284215
LVL 0.672795
LYD 5.310914
MAD 10.841048
MDL 19.335608
MGA 5034.309439
MKD 61.539439
MMK 3612.577867
MNT 3779.46024
MOP 8.934882
MRU 44.256281
MUR 51.108874
MVR 17.073163
MWK 1929.658702
MXN 21.471795
MYR 4.784385
MZN 71.045627
NAD 19.658509
NGN 1823.103063
NIO 40.952468
NOK 11.797983
NPR 149.140417
NZD 1.796762
OMR 0.428162
PAB 1.112811
PEN 4.199901
PGK 4.412421
PHP 61.981842
PKR 309.903495
PLN 4.276184
PYG 8651.746755
QAR 4.04918
RON 4.973474
RSD 117.034281
RUB 101.661095
RWF 1490.428719
SAR 4.17439
SBD 9.309084
SCR 14.918942
SDG 669.022464
SEK 11.33961
SGD 1.441344
SHP 0.847052
SLE 25.412146
SLL 23323.535348
SOS 635.954632
SRD 33.090301
STD 23021.541289
SVC 9.737342
SYP 2794.587146
SZL 19.649014
THB 37.00464
TJS 11.840396
TMT 3.904033
TND 3.369592
TOP 2.613588
TRY 37.81024
TTD 7.555466
TWD 35.441098
TZS 3035.862046
UAH 46.17264
UGX 4134.231064
USD 1.11226
UYU 45.715081
UZS 14187.784086
VEF 4029221.145275
VES 40.854166
VND 27300.42755
VUV 132.04977
WST 3.111507
XAF 656.317086
XAG 0.036092
XAU 0.000431
XCD 3.005939
XDR 0.824752
XOF 656.320038
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.391045
ZAR 19.604591
ZMK 10011.678031
ZMW 29.406134
ZWL 358.147343
  • RBGPF

    5.1600

    62.16

    +8.3%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    6.59

    +0.46%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    25.03

    -0.32%

  • NGG

    0.6500

    70.25

    +0.93%

  • BCC

    -0.7600

    135.1

    -0.56%

  • SCS

    0.2500

    14.04

    +1.78%

  • RIO

    0.6500

    63.2

    +1.03%

  • VOD

    0.1650

    10.335

    +1.6%

  • AZN

    0.7450

    79.015

    +0.94%

  • RELX

    0.3850

    48.095

    +0.8%

  • GSK

    0.5150

    43.525

    +1.18%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    25.06

    -0.16%

  • BCE

    -0.1911

    34.475

    -0.55%

  • JRI

    0.0920

    13.282

    +0.69%

  • BTI

    0.2050

    39.375

    +0.52%

  • BP

    0.4250

    32.265

    +1.32%

Greenland court extends detention of anti-whaling activist Watson
Greenland court extends detention of anti-whaling activist Watson / Photo: STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN - AFP

Greenland court extends detention of anti-whaling activist Watson

A Greenland court decided Wednesday to hold US-Canadian anti-whaling activist Paul Watson an additional 28 days pending a decision on his extradition to Japan, an anti-whaling group said.

Text size:

Watson was detained in Nuuk, the capital of the Danish autonomous territory, in July on a 2012 Japanese arrest warrant that accuses him of causing damage to one of its whaling ships in the Antarctic in 2010 and injuring a whaler.

"He has been given a further 28 days' detention, which is scandalous," Lamya Essemlali, head of the anti-whaling organisation Sea Shepherd's French branch, told AFP after Wednesday's detention hearing.

Greenland's police also confirmed the extension in a statement, without saying when a new hearing would be held.

She said the next hearing would be held on October 2, adding that his lawyers would appeal the decision.

Lawyers for Watson, 73, told AFP ahead of the hearing that they expected the court to extend his custody as a legal review of the extradition request continues.

"We are disappointed, even though we were expecting this decision," Essemlali said.

Watson, who featured in the reality TV series "Whale Wars", founded Sea Shepherd and the Captain Paul Watson Foundation (CPWF) and is known for radical tactics including confrontations with whaling ships at sea.

He was arrested on July 21 when his ship, the John Paul DeJoria, docked to refuel in Nuuk on its way to "intercept" a new Japanese whaling factory vessel in the North Pacific, according to the CPWF.

Japan accuses Watson of injuring a Japanese crew member with a stink bomb intended to disrupt the whalers' activities.

His lawyers say he is innocent, adding that they have video footage proving the crew member was not on deck when the stink bomb was thrown, but the Nuuk court has refused to view it at custody hearings.

According to Essemlali, "the judge agreed to look at the Japanese footage but refused to look at ours".

"With their images we can't see where the shot landed, unlike ours," she said.

- 'Several legal steps' -

The custody hearings are solely about Watson's detention, and not the question of his guilt nor the extradition request.

The decision about his extradition will be taken independently.

Greenland police must first decide whether there is a basis for extradition, after which the Danish justice ministry will decide whether to proceed with an extradition.

No date has been announced for those decisions.

The justice ministry told AFP the review of the extradition request was "an ongoing process".

"It is a process with several legal steps, and the Ministry of Justice is currently awaiting the legal assessment from the Greenland police and the Director of Public Prosecutions," it said in an email.

French President Emmanuel Macron's office has called for Watson's release, as have around 100,000 people who have signed a global petition.

Watson is a controversial figure among environmentalists because of his confrontational approach, which he calls "aggressive non-violence".

He told AFP in an interview at the Nuuk prison in late August that he was continuing his fight from his cell.

- 'Bright side' -

"If they think it prevents our opposition, I've just changed ship. My ship right now is Prison Nuuk," he said.

He said Japan was using him "to set an example that you don't mess around with their whaling".

Essemlali, one of his strongest supporters, told AFP this week that while Watson's arrest was "very unfair", it had provided an opportunity to shed light on Japan's whaling practices.

"The bright side of it is that there has never been as much (of a) spotlight on Japanese whaling."

"This is what we've been doing for so long, to expose what Japan is doing in Antarctica, how Japan is violating the global moratorium on whaling," she said.

Shintaro Takeda, a former harpooner who now works on land for Japan's whaling company Kyodo Senpaku, who witnessed some of the confrontations, told AFP that Watson's actions had endangered lives.

The activists "tried to wrap ropes around our propeller, and all kinds of things, which escalated year by year," Takeda, 54, said in an interview in Tokyo.

Watson has a ship stationed in each hemisphere, ready to jump into action if one of the countries that still allow whaling -- Iceland, Japan and Norway -- were to resume the hunt.

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)