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Attack
of the Hak-a-Piks
Sea
Shepherd Crew Assaulted by
Sealers then Arrested by Fisheries Officers
By The Sea Shepherd Crew
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Written
late on the night of March 31
MAGDALEN
ISLANDS, Can. -- Tonight
the Farley Mowat is
locked into the ice. We must go where the ice takes us and it has moved
us some fifty miles from the point close to the Magdalen Islands
where we were when the storm moved in. The ice pressure continues to
build.
Of
the nearly one hundred sealing ships that were in the ice on March
29th, only about 30 vessels remain. Two have sunk, others have been
abandoned and others have been damaged, their hulls being squeezed by
the increasing pressure. Most have returned to port.
One Newfoundland
sealer was overheard to say on the radio, "These seals ain't worth this
trouble b'ye."
The radio
was alive with desperate sealers calling for help from the Coast
Guard.
But one
Coast Guard ice-breaker was busy elsewhere. They dropped all their
other activities to respond to a complaint from the Newfoundland
sealer Brady Mariner
that some Sea Shepherd crew were taking pictures of their
activities.
At 1330
Hours, 18 crew from the Farley
Mowat had crossed a mile of ice to witness and photograph
sealers from the Brady Mariner.
Eight sealers came towards them armed with hak-a-pics and began to
shout and swear at them. Within minutes the sealers became violent and
attacked the Sea Shepherd crew. 19-years old Lisa Moises, from Germany,
was slapped in the face and punched in the stomach by one burly sealer.
Another attacked photographer Ian Robichaud
with a hak-a-pik, striking his camera and hitting him in the side of
the head. Adrian Haley was struck in the face. Jonathan Batchlor was
punched in the mouth. Jonny Vasic was hit in the side of the head with
a club. Petite Lisa Shalom of Montreal
was struck by a sealer as she took pictures of the assault on her
crewmates. When another sealer swung his hak-a-pik to strike Jonny
Vasic's camera, Dr. Jerry Vlasak,
(a surgeon from Los Angeles),
jumped in his way and took the blow across the face.
The crew
radioed back to Captain Paul Watson
that they had been attacked. Captain Watson called the Coast Guard
Icebreaker Amundsen and requested that the Mounted Police officers on Board
investigate the assault. They did not reply.
Instead,
a helicopter was dispatched to arrest the Sea Shepherd crew on the
ice.
Of the 18 who left to document the sealers, only seven were able to
return. They barely made it. The Amundsen
was charging through the ice to cut off their path of retreat to the Farley Mowat. Lisa
Moises and Ian Robichaud barely
made it back to the Farley Mowat. They watched as the massive red hull of the Coast
Guard Icebreaker Amundsen bore
quickly down on them in an attempt to cut them off. They could see
chunks of ice flying out from the bow of the ice breaker but they kept
focused on the Farley Mowat and managed to make it across.
Behind
them Jonny Vasic and Jon Batchelor raced to cross the ice before
the Amundsen
could cut them off. Jonny saw the hull looming above him and felt the
ice tremble as a jagged cut slithered before the bow and opened up. He
could see the dark black water widening as he jumped and made it
across, relieved to see that Jon Batchelor had done the same. Both of
them raced towards the Farley
Mowat.
Behind
them Alex Cornelissen and Lisa Shalom were not so lucky. They were cut
off and unable to cross the treacherous lead that the Amundsen
had opened up. They saw helicopters
approaching and police officers debarking the ice-breaker, their
hands on their guns approaching them.

DFO arresting Lisa Shalom and Laura Dakin on
board the Amundsen
The
eleven captured were manhandled into helicopters and taken to the Amundsen and charged.
The Amundsen
then came towards the Farley
Mowat in an intimidating manner and stopped only a few
hundred feet off the starboard side of Farley Mowat for over an hour.
No one on the Amundsen said
anything or would provide information on the crew they had taken into
custody.
Captain
Watson spoke with the Mounted Police in Charlottetown
and officially requested an investigation into the assault charges. The
entire assault was documented on the crews’ video cameras.
The
fate of the eleven arrested crew is uncertain. They have all
vowed to
refuse bail and to refuse food. The eleven represent five
different
nationalitie: Dr. Jerry Vlasak,
Colin Biroc and Andre Casanave of California; Megan Southern
and Ian
Fritz of Arizona; Ryan Goyette of Rhode Island; Matt Schwartz of Texas;
Lisa Shalom of Montreal, Quebec; Alex Cornelissen of the Netherlands,
Peter Hammarstedt of Sweden; and Laura Dakin, an Australian citizen and
resident of Bermuda.
Assaulted
with a deadly weapon, injured, and then arrested, and all
this because they attempted to take a picture of a sealer.
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19-year old volunteer from Germany,
Lisa Moises
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Newfoundland
Sealer slaps Lisa Moises. He also punched her in the stomach.
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You can
almost smell the bananas growing in Canada
these days. What kind of a democracy makes it a crime to take a
photograph or shoot film of a wildlife slaughter? What kind of
democracy responds to an assault by arresting the victim? What kind of
nation prides itself in the massacre of hundreds of thousands of baby
animals? What kind of government demands that permits be picked up in
the one place where the applicants will be assaulted and where there is
a history of violent assaults against them? What kind of nation
could
irresponsibly send ill-equipped vessels into treacherous ice
conditions
so that seals can be slaughtered?
The chaos
that has erupted in the Gulf of St. Lawrence
this week - the sinking of sealing vessels, the numerous distress
calls, the assaults, and the arrests illustrate yet once again that the
Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans is an
incompetent bureaucracy. It is the same incompetence that led to
the
collapse of the cod fishery, the same incompetence that led to charges
of dumping waste by DFO vessels in Halifax harbor, and the same
incompetence that is mismanaging and threatening the harp and hood seal
populations.
The
DFO officers have turned a blind eye to the cruelty and the violations
by sealers for decades. They have fixated on protecting the killers
from view of the world and they have demonstrated that they have lost
all sense of objectivity and balance in their approach to ocean
resource issues.
Fourteen
crew remain on the Farley Mowat.
Eleven are being
held prisoner on the Amundsen.
The seal slaughter has ended it's third day in the Gulf. Tomorrow
morning will be the fourth day of this circus of blood, gore,
and violence by the arrogantly ignorant. Yet we are still here –
the
guardians and defenders of the seals. Here we will remain until our
ship is sunk or driven out or we are captured or die out here on the
ice doing what we came here to do – to be shepherds to these young and
beautiful creatures – the harp seals.
Editor's
Note, The Aftermath
The Sea Shepherd crewmembers
who were arrested were released two days later. Sea Shepherd Advisory Board Member Bob Talbot
arrived in one of two helicopters chartered by the Humane Society of
the United States the next day and retrieved footage of the assault.
The
sealers who assaulted the crew were from the Brady Mariner, a Newfoundland fishing vessel built in 1988 with
the official number of 0810609 and registered in St. John's, Newfoundland.
The vessel was formally known as the Fundy Leader. The owner is a
man named Rendell Genge (wife, Bertha) and his address is P.O. Box 65,
Anchor Point, Newfoundland,
Canada A0K 1A0 and telephone 709-456-2654. The video sent to the Mounted Police vividly illustrates the
hostility and aggressiveness of the sealers in their attack on the
Farley Mowat crew.
The
crew who were assaulted have requested that charges be laid against the
sealers who attacked them. The Mounties are investigating the incident
and Bob Talbot will be delivering video of the assault to the Mounted
Police headquarters in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.
Currently
the ship is heading toward Labrador.
Track their progress at seashepherd.org/news.html.
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