Damage to the bow of the Greenpeace ship MV Arctic Sunrise following a collision with the factory ship of the Japanese whaling fleet, Nisshin Maru. The Nisshin Maru cut across the bow of the Arctic Sunrise, causing the collision.
Southern Ocean, International —
This morning our ship the Arctic Sunrise was deliberately rammed and damaged by the Nisshin Maru, the factory ship of the Japanese whaling fleet. Straight after the ramming, the Nisshin Maru began to steam away from the "scene of the crime". However both the Arctic Sunrise and the Esperanza are in pursuit with every intention of continuing to peacefully protest the hunt.
Speaking from onboard the Arctic Sunrise, expedition leader Shane
Rattenbury said, "There is no way to describe this as anything but a
deliberate ramming which placed the safety of our ship and the lives of
our crew in severe danger." The Nisshin Maru is more than twice as long
and six times heavier than the Arctic Sunrise. The impact has left the
Sunrise "battered and bruised" but luckily no crew members were injured.
Overnight the Nisshin Maru had been offloading accumulated whale meat
onto
a supply vessel and early this morning our activists, in inflatables,
began to paint the words "whale meat from sanctuary" on the side of the
supply ship. This action in no way impeded the transfer of the meat and
the tiny inflatables did not represent a threat to either vessel.
As the activists completed painting the slogan, the Nisshin Maru
suddenly
disengaged from the supply vessel coming around a full 360 degrees
before
making for the Arctic Sunrise, which was about a kilometre away, and
striking it on the port side. The captain of the Sunrise tried to pull
out of the way of the oncoming whaler.
Back on December 21, when the catcher ship the Kyo Maru bumped the
Esperanza, the Japanese Institute for Cetacean Research (ICR) said "the
same thing occurred five years ago when in 1999 another collision
occurred between Japan's research vessels and a Greenpeace vessel".
However, it was the Nisshin Maru, not the Arctic Sunrise, which was at
fault for the collision in December 1999 also, as officially recorded
in the Lloyd's database (the international record of maritime movements
and casualties). International maritime law states that "any vessel
overtaking any other shall keep out of the way of the vessel being
overtaken."
Watch video of the incident:
We have repeatedly informed the whaling fleet and its controlling
organisation in Tokyo, the Institute for Cetacean Research, of our peaceful
intentions and explained the purpose of the protest against the hunt.
But despite the ramming, we are not going to be deterred. "No amount of
bullying or intimidation will prevent us from defending the whales, nor
from broadcasting images of the kills to the world," said Shane.