Watson
Delivers
Message
After
Fleeing
Germany
By
Anne
Van
Gorp,
Global
Animal
Captain
Paul
Watson
contacted
Sea
Shepherd
Conservation
Society
headquarters
over
the
weekend
from
an
undisclosed
location
requesting
a
personal
message
to
be
forwarded
on
to
his
supporters.
Watson
recently
fled
Germany
after
he
was
arrested
on a
10-year-old
Costa
Rican
warrant
and
relinquished
his
bail
after
serving
a 70
day
house
arrest.
Susan
Hartland,
Administrative
Director
of
Sea
Shepherd,
stated
that
they
“have
reason
to
believe
from
a
reliable
source
that,
once
in
Costa
Rica,
the
Japanese
Government
may
have
sought
extradition
of
Captain
Watson
to
Japan
to
answer
charges
related
to
obstructing
their
illegal
whaling
activities
in
the
Southern
Ocean
Whale
Sanctuary.”

Captain
Paul
Watson
of
the
Sea
Shepherd.
Photo
Credit:
Patrick
Gherdoussi/AP
Paul
Watson
was
arrested
in
Frankfurt
on
May
13,
2012
for
a
2002
incident
in
which
Sea
Shepherd
interrupted
an
illegal
shark
fin
hunt
in
Costa
Rica.
With
mass
support
from
the
public,
the
Honorable
German
Ministers
of
Justice
and
Foreign
Affairs
released
the
whale
activist
on
bail
to
await
extradition
to
Costa
Rica.
Below
is
the
relayed
message
from
the
Sea
Shepherd
Captain,
giving
a
digest
of
his
situation
and
explaining
his
recent
actions
and
judgment.
To
my
friends
and
supporters,
I am
presently
in a
place
on
this
planet
where
I
feel
comfortable,
a
safe
place
far
away
from
the
scheming
nations
who
have
turned
a
blind
eye
to
the
exploitation
of
our
oceans.
The
German
government
said
I
betrayed
their
trust
by
leaving
Germany,
yet
they
had
already
betrayed
my
trust.
The
German
politicians
had
made
up
their
minds
politically
before
the
German
court
had
made
a
decision,
and
during
the
time
I
was
held
in
Germany,
the
Japanese
negotiated
with
Germany
to
file
for
an
extradition
order
to
Japan
on
fabricated
evidence
provided
by
former
Sea
Shepherd
Crewmember,
Peter
Bethune.
In
2010,
the
Japanese
ship
Shonan
Maru
#2
deliberately
rammed
and
destroyed
the
Ady
Gil,
nearly
killing
6
people.
The
Japanese
captain
was
not
even
questioned,
damages
were
never
paid,
no
charges
were
filed
and
they
took
the
Ady
Gil
captain,
Peter
Bethune,
back
to
Japan
where
he
cooperated
to
provide
false
evidence
to
the
Japanese
Coast
Guard
to
blame
me
for
the
boarding
actions,
despite
the
on-camera
documentation
that
I
specifically
advised
against
the
boarding
by
Bethune.
We
have
cost
the
Japanese
whaling
industry
tens
of
millions
of
dollars
and
in
October
2011,
they
were
allocated
a
war
chest
of
some
thirty
million
dollars
in
misappropriated
Tsunami
Relief
Funds
to
combat
Sea
Shepherd.
With
that
money
they
have
increased
security
at
sea,
filed
civil
suits
in
the
U.S.
Courts
against
us,
and
they
have
researched
just
where
we
might
be
vulnerable.
And
the
one
possibility
they
found
was
a
decade-old
incident
that
occurred
in
Guatemalan
waters
in
2002.
This
charge
simply
involves
obstructing
a
Costa
Rican
long-liner
with
water
hoses.
It
was
an
action
that
occurred
with
permission
of
the
Guatemalan
government
and
it
was
against
a
fully
documented
illegal
shark-finning
operation
that
was
also
filmed
for
the
award-winning
documentary
film,
“Sharkwater.”
It
was
against
a
vessel
that
only
a
year
before
had
been
convicted
of
shark-finning
in
the
waters
of
the
Galapagos
National
Park
Marine
Reserve,
where
our
vessel
the
Sirenian
had
helped
to
apprehend
them.
Japan
had
previously
tried
to
have
me
arrested
by
Interpol
for
the
Bethune
incident
but
Interpol
refused
their
request
for
a
‘red’
notification,
allowing
them
only
a
‘blue’
notice,
meaning
that
countries
could
report
my
movements
to
Japan
but
could
not
arrest
me.
In
December,
the
President
of
Costa
Rica
met
with
the
Prime
Minister
of
Japan.
I
had
attended
the
Hamburg
Film
Festival
in
November
2011
without
being
arrested
in
Germany.
In
March
I
traveled
to
Spain
and
France
without
incident.
Yet
in
May
of
2012,
I
was
arrested
in
Germany
on
an
extradition
warrant
from
Costa
Rica.
And
what
I
found
was
that
Costa
Rica,
like
Japan,
had
issued
an
Interpol
notice
and
Interpol
at
the
end
had
dismissed
the
request.
Germany
however,
a
country
without
an
extradition
treaty
with
Costa
Rica
or
Japan,
decided
to
apprehend
me
on
what
they
described
was
a
bilateral
agreement
with
Costa
Rica.
This,
of
course,
caught
Japan’s
attention
and
they
began
negotiations
to
apply
directly
to
Germany
with
a
request
for
my
extradition.
That
request
by
Japan
was
approved
by
Germany
on
July
23rd,
2012.
I
was
alerted
to
this
by
reliable
sources
on
July
22nd.
With
Costa
Rica,
I
had
the
evidence
on
film
and
with
two
dozen
witnesses
I
was
confident
that
I
could
win
the
case
against
the
allegations
of
the
shark
finners.
My
only
concern
was
that
Costa
Rica
would
then
hand
me
over
to
Japan.
For
with
Japan,
there
is
the
absolute
certainty
that
once
in
Japanese
custody,
I
will
never
be
released.
That
certainty
meant
that
there
could
only
be
one
option:
I
made
the
decision
to
depart
Germany
immediately.
I
find
it
absurd
that
in
all
the
years
I
have
been
campaigning
for
the
protection
and
conservation
of
marine
life,
where
I
have
not
caused
a
single
injury
to a
single
person
and
have
only
interfered
with
illegal
operations
as
defined
by
international
conservation
law,
that
Japan
can
make
accusations
against
me
after
destroying
a
two-million-dollar
vessel,
injuring
a
crewmember
and
almost
killing
five
others.
I am
very
disappointed
with
the
German
government.
For
me
it
is
obvious
that
the
German
government
conspired
with
Japan
and
Costa
Rica
to
detain
me
so
that
I
could
be
handed
over
to
the
Japanese.
For
me
it
is
clear
that
they
made
the
political
decision
to
turn
me
over
to
the
Japanese
even
before
a
court
decision
was
made.
All
the
German
people
that
I
have
met
were
supportive
of
the
work
I
do.
I
did
not
meet
a
single
critic
in
the
streets,
in
the
courts,
in
the
media
or
at
any
of
the
events
and
presentations
that
I
attended.
Even
the
police
and
members
of
the
court
were
supportive.
I am
very
thankful
for
the
support
that
I
received
in
Germany
and
especially
from
the
sympathetic
sources
that
provided
me
with
the
information
about
the
decisions
made
and
the
impending
political
decision
to
accept
the
Japanese
demand
to
extradite
me
to
Japan,
once
a
court
decision
would
be
on
their
desk.
This
was
never
really
about
Costa
Rica.
It
has
been
about
Japan
all
along.
We
have
confronted
the
Japanese
whalers
for
eight
seasons
and
we
have
humiliated
them
at
sea
and
more
importantly
we
have
frustrated
their
illegal
profiteering
from
the
killing
of
whales
in
the
Southern
Ocean
Whale
Sanctuary.
This
is
not
about
justice;
it
is
about
revenge.
It
is
about
a
small
group
of
dedicated
volunteers
opposing
an
economic
super
power
and
a
multi-million-dollar
whale
poaching
operation
in a
whale
sanctuary.
It
is
about
speaking
truth
to
economic
and
political
power.
Costa
Rica
and
Germany
have
simply
been
pawns
in
the
Japanese
quest
to
silence
Sea
Shepherd
in
an
attempt
to
stop
our
annual
opposition
to
their
illegal
whaling
activities.
I
know
the
whale
killing
poachers
of
Japan
will
continue
to
exploit
all
avenues
to
find
a
way
to
stop
me.
I
have,
however,
eluded
them
once
again
and
I
will
continue
to
try
and
keep
a
step
ahead
of
them,
no
matter
what
risks
and
costs
have
to
be
made.
I
can
serve
my
clients
better
at
sea
than
in a
Japanese
prison
cell
and
I
intend
to
do
just
that.
In
December,
our
ships
will
sail
forth
for
the
ninth
campaign
to
oppose
the
outlaw
Japanese
whalers
in
the
Southern
Ocean
Whale
Sanctuary.
The
campaign
will
be
called
Operation
Zero
Tolerance
and
we
will
risk
our
ships
and
our
selves
yet
again
in
the
effort
required
to
stop
these
pelagic
bandits
in
their
remorseless
slaughter
of
the
gentle
giants
of
the
seas.
Thank-you
for
your
continued
support,
Captain
Paul
Watson