Sound weapons used against anti-whaling protestors

Feb­ru­ary 1, 2009
The Japan­ese whal­ing ships have been jam­ming Sea Shep­herd com­mu­ni­ca­tions and have been deploy­ing a long range acoustic weapon device to repel Sea Shep­herd boats. The sound waves cause dis­ori­en­ta­tion and nau­sea.

Sea Shepherd zodiacFeb­ru­ary 1, 2009
The Japan­ese whal­ing ships have been jam­ming Sea Shep­herd com­mu­ni­ca­tions and have been deploy­ing a long range acoustic weapon device to repel Sea Shep­herd boats. The sound waves cause dis­ori­en­ta­tion and nau­sea.

The Japan­ese whal­ing ships have been jam­ming Sea Shep­herd com­mu­ni­ca­tions and have been deploy­ing a long range acoustic weapon device to repel Sea Shep­herd boats. The sound waves cause dis­ori­en­ta­tion and nau­sea.

The deploy­ment of mil­i­tary weapon sys­tems in the Antarc­tic Treaty Zone is a vio­la­tion of inter­na­tion­al law. The whalers are becom­ing increas­ing­ly vio­lent in defense of their ille­gal activ­i­ties.

“It is a very dra­mat­ic scene out here as ships zig zag back and forth in thick ice and heavy swells,” said Cap­tain Paul Wat­son. “The whalers are deploy­ing water can­nons, con­cus­sion grenades, acoustic weapons, and throw­ing sol­id brass and lead balls at Sea Shep­herd crewmem­bers. If we were to do any of the things these thugs are doing, we would be denounced as eco-ter­ror­ists. There cer­tain­ly is a dou­ble stan­dard where whale killers can use vio­lence with­out fear of con­dem­na­tion from their gov­ern­ment and we can’t even defend our­selves with­out con­dem­na­tion from our gov­ern­ments. What is impor­tant how­ev­er is that despite the vio­lence from the whalers, no whales are being killed. They can’t get away from us and if we keep on their tail they can’t kill whales.”

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Sea Shepherd water-cannoned
A crewmem­ber from the Steve Irwin was slight­ly injured after being struck by a high pres­sure water can­non fired from the Japan­ese whal­ing fac­to­ry ship Nis­shin Maru. One of the cam­era­men on one of the Steve Irwin’s inflat­able boats was cut and bruised above the eye when a high pres­sure blast of water knocked him off his feet while he was film­ing.

A sec­ond crew mem­ber was also injured in the con­fronta­tion with the whalers. Lau­rens De Groot of the Nether­lands was slight­ly injured when struck in the face by a met­al ball thrown by whalers. Whalers onboard the Yushin Maru #3 threw sol­id brass and lead balls at crewmem­bers on one of the Steve Irwin’s inflat­able boats.

The Sea Shep­herd crew also dis­cov­ered that the Japan­ese whal­ing fleet is deploy­ing a new weapon in defence of their ille­gal whal­ing activ­i­ties.

The fac­to­ry ship the Nis­shin Maru and the two har­poon ves­sels in the fleet are equipped with Long Range Acousti­cal Devices (LRAD). This is a mil­i­tary grade weapon sys­tem that sends out mid to high fre­quen­cy sound waves designed to dis­ori­ent and pos­si­bly inca­pac­i­tate per­son­nel. It is basi­cal­ly an anti-per­son­nel weapons sys­tem.

The Steve Irwin has been chas­ing the Japan­ese whal­ing fleet for twen­ty-four hours at high speed through scat­tered ice fields and chang­ing weath­er con­di­tions for over three hun­dred miles west­ward across the top of the Ross Sea.

At 0500 Hours (Syd­ney Time) the Steve Irwin deployed two fast inflat­able boats and a heli­copter to harass the fleet and to hur­ry them along. Sea Shep­herd’s strat­e­gy is to keep the whal­ing fleet on the move. If they are run­ning they are not killing whales and no whales have been killed dur­ing the last 24 hours. In fact the Steve Irwin crew were excit­ed to see Fin whales swim­ming along­side the ship as they pur­sued the whal­ing fleet.

The Japan­ese har­poon ves­sels have been maneu­ver­ing very close to the Steve Irwin to intim­i­date and to try and lead the Sea Shep­herd ship away from the Nis­shin Maru. The con­fronta­tion that began in clear weath­er in dense ice and heavy swells became increas­ing treach­er­ous as fog and bliz­zard con­di­tions moved in around 0900 Hours.

The Steve Irwin crew retreat­ed when with­in range of the acoustic weapons.

“All we need to do is to keep them run­ning and to keep them from whal­ing and that is exact­ly what we are doing. It is prov­ing to be a very suc­cess­ful day,” said Cap­tain Paul Wat­son.

Weath­er con­di­tions are becom­ing increas­ing worse with heavy snow, fog, increas­ing swells and denser ice con­di­tions.

http://www.seashepherd.org/