Commentary: A Call From Berlin To Defend Our Oceans

By Captain Paul Watson

BERLIN, Germany, May 23, 2012 (ENS) – What a day! With only a couple of hours sleep, Scott West and I caught a cab to Frankfurt airport at 0430 hours with a stop on the way for my first report of the day to the Frankfurt police station. We caught the 0730 flight to Berlin where we were met by Jean and Ulrike of Sea Shepherd Berlin and from there were driven straight to the Victory Statue plaza where Costa Rican President Laura Chinchilla Miranda of Costa Rica was due to pass by.

Captain Watson joins Sea Shepherd supporters in Berlin, May 23, 2012. (Photo by Jan Holste courtesy Sea Shepherd)

When we arrived there were already about a hundred people present and not long after, the Costa Rican President drove by on her way into the city. We clearly got her attention. We knew she would be coming back for her scheduled meeting with the German government at Schloss Bellevue, the residence of the German President. As we waited hundreds more people arrived all wearing Sea Shepherd shirts, some from Hamburg, Munich and Bremerhaven, Cologne and others from Australia, Netherlands, and even Costa Rica.

By the time President Chinchilla Miranda returned in her police escorted motorcade, there were about 400 Sea Shepherd supporters and about a dozen Berlin police officers who were also very supportive. There was no doubt that Sea Shepherd Berlin was well represented and it was made evident to the President that our support base is strong.

All through the day diverse reports kept coming in of Sea Shepherd demonstrations in front of German embassies and consulates in Hong Kong, Australia, Canada, the United States, South Africa, France, Spain, Brazil, Costa Rica, and many other countries. In Paris the protest took place at the Eiffel Tower.

The demonstrations were organized to call for my freedom and to send a message to Germany to drop an extradition charge that Interpol has already dismissed as politically motivated, but it was also about something more.

Laura Chinchilla Miranda, President of Costa Rica addresses the UN Human Rights Council, Sept. 19, 2011.(Photo by Jean-Marc Ferré courtesy UN)

My arrest on a charge stemming from disrupting illegal shark fin poaching operations in Central America a decade ago, has given Sea Shepherd Conservation Society a wonderful opportunity to shift the focus to the international travesty and criminality of shark finning- the brutal and remorseless massacre of tens of millions of sharks worldwide to supply the shark fin soup demands of some Asian countries.

It was an opportunity to focus attention on Dr. Giam Choo Hoo of Singapore, the notorious member of the UN committee CITES, who works for the shark finning industry and has helped to block protection for endangered species of sharks. It was an opportunity to focus on the incredible slaughter of sharks in Central and Latin America and the insatiable demand for shark fins in Asia.

It was an opportunity to focus on our up-coming summer campaign to the South Pacific to investigate shark finning. It was also an opportunity to offer Costa Rica an offer of cooperation and support to defend and protect the beautifully unique marine eco-system around Costa Rica’s treasured Cocos Island.

Sea Shepherd demonstration at Victory Statue plaza in Berlin. (Photo by Jan Holste courtesy Sea Shepherd)

Although I was a Berliner for a day, I had to leave the incredible crowd of passionate German Sea Shepherd activists to return to Frankfurt where I was able to report to the police before five o’clock. Under the terms of my release I must report to the Frankfurt police station twice daily, once before eleven in the morning and again before five in the afternoon. Of course I am not allowed to leave Germany. /p>

Although not a prisoner in the actual prison anymore, I remain a prisoner under house arrest, forbidden to leave Germany until the extradition demand is dropped or until I am forced to go to Costa Rica.

In Frankfurt for the evening and unable to attend our 35th anniversary fund raising event in Cannes, I was still able to participate by Skype with all those attending, not quite the same thing but better than nothing. It has always been my policy to expect the unexpected and then work to make the unexpected work for the cause. That is what we are doing and we are turning the inconvenience of my restrictions to Germany into a campaign not just to free myself from this extradition demand, but more importantly to make this a campaign about saving our sharks and defending our oceans.

Shark finning on the deck of a Costa Rican vessel (Photo credit unknown)

In 1997 when I faced a similar situation in the Netherlands where I was held for 120 days on a Norwegian extradition request, we were able to turn the internment into a highly publicized campaign against Norwegian whaling. We now have an excellent opportunity to take advantage of this turn of events to address the plight of the sharks of the world’s oceans.

This showing by thousands of people worldwide calling for action to win my freedom is much appreciated and incredibly encouraging. Yet even more encouraging is the opportunity to explore real possibilities for hands-on shark conservation work in Costa Rica and the opportunity to reach millions of people with the important message that sharks are endangered and we need to do all that we can to defend and protect them. Thanks to the encouraging support of thousands of people worldwide I can see the bright side of my position here as a prisoner in Germany.

Sea Shepherd Conservation Society is becoming a stronger voice every day in defense of the diversity of living species in our oceans. Today gave me the opportunity to see that collective voice in action and what I saw was a passionate, dedicated, and loving concern for our oceans and the wonderful sentient beings that dwell within the briny depths of our life sustaining oceans.

{Editor’s Note: This commentary was posted May 24, 2012. Paul Watson was arrested by the German authorities on May 12 for extradition to Costa Rica and held in a Frankfurt prison until his release on bail May 21. The German police have said that the warrant for his arrest is in response to an alleged “violation of ships traffic” in Costa Rica, which occurred in April 2002.

While the President of Costa Rica Wednesday promised that if extradited, Watson would be tried fairly, Sea Shepherd is concerned about his safety if imprisoned in Costa Rica.

Watson said in a message May 23, “Although I have no reason to believe that the Costa Rican legal system would not give me a fair trial, my concern is not for the judicial system, but for the reality that the shark fin mafia of Costa Rica has a price on my head and a Costa Rican prison would provide an excellent opportunity for someone to exercise this lethal contract against me. We have cost the shark finners a great deal of money over the last two decades and they want their revenge. I would need absolute assurance that the Costa Rican authorities would not place me in the position to jeopardize my safety when I return to Costa Rica to prove my innocence in court.”

See ENS reports:Sea Shepherd’s Watson Jailed in Germany for 2002 Shark Defense Sea Shepherd Eludes Angry Costa Rican Authorities Sea Shepherd Captain Releases Poachers Upon Arrest Threat

Brief biography for Captain Paul Watson:

  • Founder and President – Sea Shepherd Conservation Society (1977-2012)
  • Co-Founder – The Greenpeace Foundation
  • Director – Greenpeace Foundation (1972 – 1977)
  • Co-Founder – Greenpeace International (1979)
  • National Director of the Sierra Club USA (2003-2006)
  • Director – Farley Mowat Institute
  • Master and Commander of the Conservation Ships Steve Irwin, Bob Barker and Brigitte Bardot

Watson derived the name of his organization, the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, from a verse by the British poet Edmund Spenser (1552-1599) Whom when I asked from which place he came, And how he hight himself he be yclepe, The Shepheard of the Ocean by Name And said he came from the main sea deepe.

Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2012. All rights reserved.

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