Kamis, 31 Oktober 2013

Fugitive eco activist lands in US after 15 months at sea

Los Angeles (AFP) - Fugitive eco-warrior Paul Watson has arrived in the United States after 15 months at sea on the run from an international Interpol request for his arrest, he announced Thursday.

Watson vowed to continue campaigning "undaunted" and said he was heading for Seattle after arriving in Los Angeles earlier this week, to defend himself from legal action there.

"I have returned to the United States," he said in a statement on his Facebook page, adding that an Interpol "Red Notice" from Costa Rica "has been dropped."

Watson said he would challenge a Red Notice requested by Japan in the United States, adding that he was "heading to Seattle to defend Sea Shepherd and myself from the ... civil suit launched by the Japanese whalers.

"We carry on with our efforts to save the oceans, undeterred and undaunted."

Watson, a 62-year-old Canadian, arrived in Los Angeles on Monday, passed through customs and "was not arrested," Lamya Essemlali, head of Sea Shepherd France, told AFP.

He decided to disembark to testify in a court case due to take place next week in Seattle over his marine conservation organization's actions in Antarctica against Japanese whalers.

Watson was arrested in May last year in Frankfurt on a warrant from Costa Rica, where he is wanted on charges stemming from a high-seas confrontation over shark finning in 2002.

He was released on bail after paying a fine, and was ordered to appear before police twice a day. But he skipped bail on July 22, 2012 and fled Germany.

The following month, France-based Interpol issued an international request for his arrest.

The organization does not have the power to issue international arrest warrants but can ask member countries make arrests based on foreign warrants through a Red Notice.

Watson, known to his supporters as "The Captain," had been on the run at sea since then, and even participated in a new campaign against Japanese whalers in Antarctica last winter.

And when an anti-whaling fleet he had been on docked in Australia in March, he made no appearance on the ground but the country's attorney general had hinted he would not be detained if he came to shore.

Japanese authorities describe methods used by Sea Shepherd against whaling ships -- for example blocking the boats' propellers -- as "terrorist."

Society & CulturePaul WatsonSea ShepherdUnited StatesLos Angeles
http://news.yahoo.com/sea-months-sea-shepherd-fugitive-founder-disembarks-190240505.html

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