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Japanese whalers clash with militant activists

AP Photo/Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, Barbara VeigaContact: In this photo released by the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, the Japanese whaling ship <I>Shonan Maru No. 2</I>, right, uses its water cannon against the anti-whaling group's flagship <I>Steve Irwin </I>during their encounter in the Antarctic Ocean on December 22. The Japanese whaling fleet left Japan last month for the annual "research whaling" in the Antarctic Ocean.

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Japanese whalers and militant conservationists have clashed in the Antarctic Ocean over two days, with weapons including water cannon, blinding lasers and bottles of rancid acid, both sides said.

Each accused the other of coming dangerously close during the clashes. Neither reported any injuries or ship damage.

The New Zealand-registered Sea Shepherd Conservation Society ship Ady Gil came within 66 feet of colliding with the bow of Japanese harpoon ship Sonan Maru No. 2 last Wednesday, the Japanese government-sponsored Institute of Cetacean Research said in a statement.

The activists tried to blind the Japanese crew with lasers and "fired ball-like projectiles with a projectile-launching device" during an attack that lasted 3.5 hours, the statement said.

Sea Shepherd accused the Japanese of using crowd-control sound technology known as a Long Range Acoustic Devices, or LRADs, as well as water cannon against the Ady Gil crew.

The activists said they responded with lasers to get the Japanese to back off to a safe distance. The Japanese said the attack on Wednesday was more dangerous than a confrontation late on December 22 between the same whaler and Sea Shepherd's Netherlands-registered flagship Steve Irwin.

The Japanese accuse both Sea Shepherd ships of trailing ropes in failed bids to entangle the whaler's rudder and propeller.

The whalers also accused the Steve Irwin crew of hurling bottles of butyric acid — a rancid liquid that occurs in spoiled butter — during a two-hour conflict.

Sea Shepherd makes an annual attempt to stop Japanese whalers from harpooning hundreds of whales during the southern hemisphere summer, which began this month.

The first clash of the current whaling season happened Dec. 14 when the Steve Irwin and Sonan Maru No. 2 exchanged water cannon fire.

Japan's whale hunts are allowed under international rules as a research programme, despite a 1986 ban on commercial whaling. Whale meat not used for study is sold for consumption in Japan, which critics say is the real reason for the hunts.

www.icrwhale.org

www.seashepherd.org

AP Photo/Institute of Cetacean ResearchCounter attack: In this photo released by the Institute of Cetacean Research of Japan, an activist of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society sends what appeared to be a green laser from the deck of the anti-whaling group's newly-acquired vessel, the <I>Ady Gil</I>, towards the Japanese whaling ship <I>Shonan Maru No. 2</I> during their encounter in the Antarctic early December 23. The <I>Ady Gil</I> is a high-speed trimaran previously known as the Earthrace that recently set the world record for global circumnavigation.