Guest guest Posted July 25, 2005 Report Share Posted July 25, 2005 [The Canadian government just keeps getting sicker and sicker. Rick] Fw: The Halifax Herald - A shepherd on the lam - Column by Silver Don Cameron Sun, 24 Jul 2005 17:11:04 -0700 The Halifax Herald A shepherd on the lam - Column by Silver Don Cameron Sunday, July 24th, 2005 After leaving Halifax, I drove to Cape Breton Island to the Farley and Claire Mowat " safe house " . While there we had dinner with Silver Don Cameron and his wife at the Auberge Acadienne. I had last seen Silver Don way back in 1976 when my Greenpeace crew shared the same boarding house with Brian Davies and his IFAW crew. Silver Don was there covering the seal slaughter as a reporter. That was our first campaign to interfere with the massacre of seals. Almost thirty years later, the fight to protect the seals continues. There really is no rest on Planetary Duty. The late Robert Hunter was at that boarding house also and Silver Don quotes him in this column. Silver Don Cameron wrote a column in the Halifax Herald this week-end about our meeting. The morning after our dinner together, I drove to my sister Sharyn's place in Oak Bay, New Brunswick to visit with her and her husband Peter and my Nephew Trevor and his wife Shiva. The next day I drove to Portland, Maine and flew back to the West coast. Canada apparently has a summons for me on three counts. The first is for operating a Canadian vessel in Canadian waters without a Canadian licensed Master. The second count is for operating a Canadian registered vessel in Canadian waters without a Canadian licensed Mate and the third count is for failing to identify the master of the vessel when it wintered Canadian waters. I have been the Captain and operator of the Farley Mowat since we first flew the Canadian flag in March of 2002. I have operated the same ship since 1996. I have had the ship in Canadian waters prior to the seal hunt and I was never informed that there were manning requirements. In fact, the Registrar of shipping specifically said that there were not manning requirements for a Canadian registered pleasure craft as outlined in the Canada Shipping Act. In fact it is actually illegal for a Canadian registered non-revenue paid vessel to operate in Canada with a Master who is a Canadian resident. So if I had a Canadian resident as Master, I would be in violation and apparently I am in violation for not having a Canadian resident as Master. Although I am a Canadian citizen, I am not a Canadian resident. This is of course harassment and persecution, something that I am well used to dealing with over the last three decades with reference to Canada and the obscenity called the seal slaughter. I have found out that the paddy wagon was present at Dalhousie University, not because they were going to arrest me, (they insist they were not there to take me into custody but to serve me with a summons to appear in court.) but because they said that my " reputation " made for the possibility of arrest. I guess they thought that I would assault the officers for serving me with the summons. I was not served and since I am back in Canada now, they won't be serving me before the August 25th date that they have scheduled me for court in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. A good thing because I have plans to be patrolling in the Galapagos on that date looking for poachers. And yes, I will be the Captain of my Canadian registered ship in the Galapagos. What bothers me is that despite the complete video documentation of the violent assault on my crew by sealers in March of this year, despite the sealers having been identified and despite one sealer telling an RCMP officer that he was proud to have slugged my crew, no charges have been laid against any of the sealers. Justice is not blind in Canada. In fact Justice allows for violence against seal defenders and prohibits the documentation of the illegal acts and the cruelty of the sealers. Je suis Canadien unfortunately. I will of course answer to these charges at some date in the future. I'm sure they will attempt to serve me again but I intend to appear in court when it is convenient for me to do so and not when I am ordered to do so. Eleven of my crew are scheduled to appear in Court in Charlottetown in September on charges of approaching a seal hunt with the intent to document the killing of seals. For that they face a year in jail and up to $100,000 in fines. Captain Paul Watson The story can be found at: http://www.herald.ns.ca/cgi-bin/home/displaystory?2005/07/24+122.raw+NovaScotian\ +2005/07/24 or pasted below: Sunday, July 24, 2005 Back The Halifax Herald Limited -- File Paul Watson is captain of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society's boat, the Farley Mowat. While in Halifax recently, police tried to charge him with operating in Canadian waters without a Canadian-certified captain or first mate. A shepherd on the lam By SILVER DONALD CAMERON / First Words Paul Watson, having delivered his lecture, is running down a staircase in the Dalhousie Student Union building, hotly pursued by the police. Escaping to the street, he squirrels himself away in a nearby building and watches the police searching for him, a paddy wagon standing by. When they leave, he slips away into the night. This is Captain Paul Watson, who was in Nova Scotia for a joint board meeting of the Sierra Clubs of Canada and the United States. Founder and president of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, a founding member of Greenpeace, skipper of the 180-foot long-range, ice-class conservation ship Farley Mowat, Watson is - in Mowat's words - " the world's most aggressive, most determined, most active and most effective defender of wildlife. " So why was he on the lam? Watson didn't really know. All he knew was that the police were waiting for him. When a cop called out to him, he ran - and the cop ran after him. Seeing the paddy wagon, Watson concluded that he was probably facing arrest for something like " conspiracy to violate the Seal Protection Regulations. " Did you know about these fork-tongued regulations? They " protect " seals by prohibiting protesters from coming within half a mile of the people who are smashing in the seals' heads. Only licensed " observers " can go to the hunt, and observation licences cannot be granted to anyone likely to impede the killing. As Globe and Mail columnist Margaret Wente notes, no matter how you feel about the seal hunt - she believes that most Canadians oppose it - " it is a terrible black eye for Canada. " The only thing many foreigners know about Canada is that " we kill defenseless baby animals so that a bunch of rich women can wear seal-fur coats. " The seal kill - which is neither a " hunt, " nor a " harvest " - is reputedly the largest mass slaughter of wildlife in the world, and the government of Canada vigorously supports it. The Department of Former Fisheries and Empty Oceans set a quota of 320,000 seals this spring, one of the largest quotas in history - did you know that? - and annually sends out a whole task force of Coast Guard icebreakers, DFO officials, mounted policemen and helicopters to support the hunt and subvert the protests. Last March, Paul Watson took an international team of animal rights activists aboard the Farley Mowat, and sailed to the Gulf of St. Lawrence. On the ice, 18 protesters were attacked by sealers brandishing hakapiks, the steel-spiked clubs used to kill seals. The attack was videotaped; you can see it at www.seashepherd.org. With this evidence, the protesters laid assault complaints with the RCMP. Instead of arresting the sealers, however, the Horsemen brought charges against the protesters for contravening the Seal Protection Regulations - using the protesters' own videotape to show that the protesters were within half a mile of the sealers. The regulations, of course, say nothing about a situation in which the sealers go after the protesters, only the other way around. The matter goes to trial in September. This is not law enforcement: this is outright persecution. Winking at violence and crafting regulations designed to pulverize dissent is not merely an illegitimate reaction to opposition; it is a Stalinist insult to democracy. Not in my name, Minister. And Paul Watson? He couldn't be charged under the regulations, since he was on the ship, and not within half a mile of the affray. But he has been charged with conspiracy before, and he believed that was the charge on which he was to be arrested at Dalhousie. In fact it wasn't; the cops were there to serve him a summons for operating in Canadian waters without a Canadian-certified captain or first mate. This is clearly a technicality, since Watson has 30 years of experience operating vessels both in and out of Canada, and in places like Labrador and Antarctica. This spring, the Watson's ship uneventfully weathered storms which sank two sealing vessels and seriously damaged others. The government is once again using the law to persecute its opponents. That's contemptible. The government may find Watson intemperate, discomfiting and uncompromising - but he is a citizen of this country with the right to express his convictions in actions as well as in words. The government has no business treating such citizens as enemies. The over-arching issue of our time, said the late Bob Hunter, Watson's friend and fellow Greenpeace founder, is " whether or not we come to terms with the politics of Earth and sky, evolution and transformation, God and nature. Otherwise, in our lifetimes, we shall suffer the enactment of the saga of Genesis, our expulsion from paradise and the fall of nature itself. " That's Paul Watson's message, too. We are making war on nature, and if we win, we die. We persecute such prophets at our peril. Silver Donald Cameron lives in D'Escousse Cape Breton Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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