Junichi and Toru continue to be held in
detention in Aomori, where they have been since their arrest on June
10th, despite widespread international protest.
They exposed the whale-meat embezzlement scandal on May 15th, when they
presented a box of whale meat stolen by crew of Japan's so-called
"scientific whaling" fleet to the Tokyo Public Prosecutor. A dossier
documenting how the box was intercepted during the four month long
Greenpeace investigation was also submitted to the Tokyo Public
Prosecutor.
The scam, in which prime cuts of whale meat are smuggled off the ship
by crew members and sold outside official channels – for personal
profit, appears to have been running for years, with the full awareness
of the officials that conduct the whaling expeditions.
"Instead of prosecuting peaceful protesters and those who exposed
crimes within the whaling programme, the government of Japan should
revoke all Southern Ocean whaling permits, release the activists and
order an immediate and independent investigation into the embezzlement
scandal."
Gerd Leipold, Executive Director, Greenpeace International
However, it appears that powerful forces within Japan's
government don't want scrutiny of the whaling industry. On the day the
activists were arrested, the Public Prosecutor dropped the
investigation into the whaling industry, claiming there was
insufficient evidence to pursue charges against any of the crew or
whaling officials.
Also, on the day the activists were arrested, more than 40 police
officers raided the offices of Greenpeace Japan - watched by the media,
who had been tipped off by the police - and spent ten hours seizing
cell phones, documents, and computers. Given that we had already
submitted a dossier detailing how the box was taken and why, and
promised our full support with any investigation, a simple phone call
would have been enough to bring Junichi and Toru to the police station.
"From the beginning it has been clear that the arrest and detention of
the Junichi and Toru has been politically motivated, and that powerful
forces within the Japanese establishment are attempting to silence
legitimate peaceful protest, in order to protect the so-called
scientific whaling programme," said Gerd Leipold, Greenpeace
International Executive Director.
"We have exposed a scandal at the heart of the whaling programme,
involving embezzlement of valuable cuts of whale meat, and we have
highlighted the massive waste of Japanese taxpayers' money on the
annual so-called scientific hunt in the Southern Ocean Whale
Sanctuary," he continued.
"Instead of prosecuting peaceful protesters and those who exposed
crimes within the whaling programme, the government of Japan should
revoke all Southern Ocean whaling permits, release the activists and
order an immediate and independent investigation into the embezzlement
scandal."
There's been massive global reaction to the arrest of Junichi and Toru.
Some 30 environmental and human rights organizations have either put
their names to an NGO (Non-Governmental Organsiation) statement of
protest, or sent letters of support, including Amnesty International,
the Lawyers Network for Human Rights Observation, International Fund
for Animal Welfare, InArticle 19, Transparency International, Oceana,
Ubuntu, and Oxfam. A network of Japanese lawyers has called the arrests
a "violation of human rights", and "a challenge to the freedom of
expression in Japan".
Almost quarter of a million of you have sent letters to the Japanese
Government calling for the release of Junichi and Toru and demanding a
full investigation into the whale meat embezzlement scandal. Protests
have been held outside Japanese embassies and consulates in 35 cities
across 30 countries.
We're still working hard to get Junichi and Toru out of detention, so
if you haven't written to the Japanese government yet, please do so!
The investigation
Our four-month undercover investigation revealed evidence of an
embezzlement ring involving crew members on board the Nisshin Maru, who
were openly taking the best cuts of whale meat during the so-called
scientific hunt, smuggling it ashore disguised as personal luggage and
then passing it to traders for illegal sales and personal profit.
Working from information given by former and current Kyodo Senpaku
employees, we documented the off-loading of smuggled whale meat into a
special truck, in full view of Kyodo Senpaku officials and crew members
when the Nisshin Maru docked on April 15th, this year.
The consignment was documented by our team once it left the ship and
tracked to a depot in Tokyo. One of four boxes destined for the same
private address was then intercepted in order to verify the contents
and establish the fraud.
The consignment notes claimed the box contained "cardboard" but in
reality it held 23.5kg of salted 'prime' whale meat, worth up to
US$3,000. One informer told Greenpeace that dozens of crew take as many
as 20 boxes each. One crewmember was overheard to claim he had built a
house on the proceeds from his whale-meat sales over the years.