• About Us
  • Editorial Team
  • Cyber ​​Media Guidelines
  • Karir
  • Kontak
Friday, June 5, 2026
AsiaToday.id
  • HOME
  • NEWS
  • BUSINESS
  • GREEN ENERGY
  • TRAVEL
  • EVENT
  • SCIENCE & ENVIRONMENT
  • CORPORATION
  • FORUM
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • NEWS
  • BUSINESS
  • GREEN ENERGY
  • TRAVEL
  • EVENT
  • SCIENCE & ENVIRONMENT
  • CORPORATION
  • FORUM
No Result
View All Result
AsiaToday.id
No Result
View All Result
Home STUDY AND ENVIRONMENT

Greenpeace Co-Founder Arrested

Environmental campaigner Paul Watson has been detained in Greenland and is now facing extradition to Japan

by Redaksi Asiatoday
July 23, 2024
in STUDY AND ENVIRONMENT
Reading Time: 2 mins read
A A
0
Greenpeace Co-Founder Arrested

Greenpeace. Doc

ASIATODAY.ID, JAKARTA – Anti-whaling campaigner and Greenpeace co-founder Paul Watson was arrested on Sunday on an international warrant issued by Japan. The activist has been sought by Tokyo for over a decade over violent altercations with local whalers.

The 73-year-old veteran environmental activist ended up in custody when his ship got raided by police after docking in Greenland for resupply.

Watson has already appeared before a district court that will now decide on his possible extradition to Japan, local police said in a statement.

RelatedPosts

Securing Carbon Credits for Smallholder Farmers

Indonesia Faces Methane Emergency as ASEAN and South Korea Launch $20 Million Climate Waste Initiative

AMAN and UNESCO Lead Safety Training for Indigenous Women Journalists in Makassar

The Captain Paul Watson Foundation has condemned the potential extradition as a “politically motivated request,” urging the Danish government to release the activist immediately. The Foundation revealed Watson was in the middle of a campaign to intercept the Kangei Maru, a large, newly-built Japanese whaling ship.

The arrest of the activist likely stemmed from an international Red Notice issued against him by Japan back in 2012 on charges of causing damage and injury in two incidents with a Japanese whaling vessel back in 2010. While the Red Notice had been ultimately dropped, Tokyo apparently quietly put it back, the Foundation suggested.

“This development comes as a surprise since the Foundation’s lawyers had reported that the Red Notice had been withdrawn. However, it appears that Japan made the notice confidential to facilitate Paul’s travel for the purpose of making an arrest,” the Foundation explained.

The group also alleged that the arrest of Watson was set up specifically to coincide with the launch of the Kangei Maru. The new, massive $47-million whaling vessel was commissioned earlier this year and is currently out in the North Pacific.

Commercial whaling was banned by the International Whaling Commission (IWC) back in 1986, yet Japan was allowed to continue hunting a small number of whales each year in the Antarctic for “scientific” purposes. In 2014, the International Court of Justice ordered Tokyo to stop these hunts as well, ruling they were not actually legitimate scientific endeavors but rather a guise for commercial whaling.

Japan ultimately withdrew from the IWC four years later, ending the Antarctic “scientific” expeditions while resuming commercial whaling in its domestic waters. Tokyo has for long argued that whaling and consuming the meat of marine mammals was an integral part of the country’s “culture.” (RT/AT Network)

Follow Us at Google News and WA Channel

Tags: GreenpeaceJapanSave OceanWhale Shark
No Result
View All Result

Terbaru

  • Indonesia’s Nickel Crisis Deepens: Weda Bay Mine Shutdown Puts 11,700 Jobs at Risk
  • China’s Nickel Giants Look to Africa as Policy Uncertainty Puts Indonesia’s Dominance at Risk
  • Indonesia’s Immigration Corruption Scandal: Deputy Minister Suspended as KPK Uncovers $9 Million Extortion Scheme
  • Indonesia Secures OECD Backing, Trade Gains, and Strategic Partnerships with Major Economies
  • Global Markets Warn Indonesia’s Nickel Industry: Prove It’s Green or Risk Losing Access
  • About Us
  • Editorial Team
  • Cyber ​​Media Guidelines
  • Karir
  • Kontak

© 2022 Asiatoday.id - Asiatoday Network.

Welcome Back!

OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • NEWS
  • BUSINESS
  • GREEN ENERGY
  • TRAVEL
  • EVENT
  • SCIENCE & ENVIRONMENT
  • CORPORATION
  • FORUM

© 2022 Asiatoday.id - Asiatoday Network.