- An anti-whaling group says it split up Japan’s fleet and chased it out of the Antarctic zone
- “Within a day and a half, we have the entire whaling fleet in disarray,” an activist says
- Japan says the whaling ships are still in the Southern Ocean and the hunt continues
- Environmental groups clash each year with Japan’s whaling vessels
(CNN) — Environmental activists have declared an early success at the start of their annual high seas showdown with Japanese whalers in Antarctic waters.
The anti-whaling group Sea Shepherd Australia said its ships had split up the Japanese fleet in the Southern Ocean and chased it out of the main Antarctic zone.
“The whale poaching fleet is scattered and currently not hunting whales,” Sea Shepherd said in a statement Monday.
But Japanese authorities say the hunt is still on.
Watch ships sandwich activist vessel
Japan’s fleet carries out an annual whale hunt despite a worldwide moratorium, taking advantage of a loophole in the law that permits the killing of the mammals for scientific research. Whale meat is commonly available for consumption in Japan.
Each year, environmental groups like Sea Shepherd pursue the Japanese hunters in an attempt to disrupt the whaling. The resulting confrontations have led to
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