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A "living statue" of Lady justice protests on behalf of Greenpeace in front of the Japanese embassy in The Hague, Netherlands.
Enlarge ImageThe co-defendants include the chief whale-defenders (officially, Executive Directors) of Greenpeace offices from Japan, Germany, Netherlands, Australia, Switzerland, Brazil, USA and the Nordic countries, as well as Australian ex-whaling captain Paddy Hart.
Marking the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the group declared themselves 'co-defendants' in the trial of Junichi Sato and Toru Suzuki. The two Greenpeace activists exposed corruption in the taxpayer-funded whaling industry, but were themselves arrested in a crackdown on Greenpeace itself in Tokyo.
A quarter of a million Greenpeace supporters wrote to the Prime Minister to demand their release. The arrest was denounced by Amnesty International, and fits a pattern of repression of the rights of free speech in Japan which has been condemned by the United Nations.
The group challenged the Prime Minister to set Junichi and Toru free, and end the corrupt whaling programme, or order their own arrest for daring to oppose the whaling programme. 30,000 people have also signed petitions declaring themselves complicit in Junichi and Toru's actions, and stated that if defending whales is a crime, they too are guilty.
"We want Prime Minister Aso to know that if Junichi Sato and Toru Suzuki
are to be tried for exposing whale meat embezzlement and working to end
the killing of whales in the Japanese Government's 'research' programme
in the Southern Ocean, then we should all be arrested," said Jun
Hoshikawa, Executive Director of Greenpeace Japan. "It's not Greenpeace
activists who should be put on trial; it is the government-backed
whaling programme in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary."
Following a Greenpeace undercover investigation in May 2008
that exposed the embezzlement of whale meat from the taxpayer-funded
whaling fleet, Japanese authorities responded with a politically-motivated prosecution, arresting Junichi Sato and Toru uzuki and raiding the Greenpeace Japan office in June 2008. They have now been awaiting trial for 172 days under bail conditions which prevent hem from continuing their Greenpeace campaign work to end whaling.
The trial is expected to begin early next year; they are both facing up
to 10 years imprisonment.
Meanwhile, events will be happening throughout today and tomorrow at Japanese embassies in Brazil, USA, New Zealand, Argentina, France, Norway, Finland, Sweden, Denmark, Netherlands, Belgium, Mexico, Spain, Greece, Canada, Italy and on Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia, activists declared themselves as 'co-defendants', by asking the Japanese government to "Arrest Me Too" and to put "Whaling on Trial".
Australian ex-whaling captain Paddy Hart, in Tokyo to support the Tokyo
Two and the campaign to end Japan's whaling, was a master and gunner at
the Cheynes Beach Whaling Station in Western Australia until it ceased
operation in 1978 - following Greenpeace protests.
"I'm here to assure whalers that there is life after whaling. Japan's
whaling programme is a taxpayer-funded government enterprise, so when it
finally ends, it's the responsibility of the Japanese government and the
Fisheries Agency to retrain the crews for other, sustainable, work."
"In Australia alone, 300 million Australian dollars are made every year from
whalewatching - hundreds of times more than was ever made by the whaling
industry", said Hart. "I am proud of my time at sea, but it was 30 years
ago. Times have changed, and the world has moved on - whaling no longer
has a place in the world."
Opposed to whaling? We're all Junichi & Toru. Download and print a mask
Do you know the story of Spartacus? He was the leader of a slave revolt in ancient Rome. When soldiers put down the uprising, the Romans demanded to know which of the slaves was Spartacus. One by one, each slave stood up to declare that he was Spartacus, masking their leader's true identiy and declaring their unity with his cause.
You can join Junichi and Toru in putting whaling on trial by contributing to our "Spartacus petition." Download a mask, and upload your picture wearing it to this Flickr account: loaf84lope@photos.flickr.com