Unjust Conviction of Anti-Whaling Activists Upheld by Sendai
Unjust Conviction of Anti-Whaling Activists Upheld by Sendai High Court
Auckland 13, July, 2011 – Greenpeace today condemned Japan’s ongoing disregard for international human rights law, following the Sendai High Court’s decision to uphold convictions handed down to anti-whaling activists Junichi Sato and Toru Suzuki.
The decision comes in spite of an official admission of wrongdoing by the Fisheries Agency of Japan in December 2010, and strong evidence supporting the activists’ allegations of criminal embezzlement.
Known as the Tokyo Two, Sato and Suzuki were convicted of “theft and “trespass” (1) by the Aomori District Court in September 2010, after they exposed broad scale embezzlement in Japan’s whaling industry, The court rejected all of the arguments presented by the defence, upheld the unjust convictions handed down by the Aomori court, and gave no clear reasoning for its decision.
“The court did not acknowledge that the substantial evidence showing the occurrence of embezzlement, and it did not take the right to investigate and criticise such practices into proper consideration,” said Junichi Sato, defendant and Greenpeace Japan Executive Director.
“Above all, the court did not take into account the damning admission by the Fisheries Agency of Japan, and its apology for its officials’ acceptance of expensive, illegal whale meat gifts from the fleet operators (2) – in quantities far greater than we were convicted of taking.”
“We have proven our case and the FAJ has admitted wrongdoing, yet we are still being punished for standing up to corruption, while those behind the real crime walk free,” said Sato.
“For too long bureaucrats have
had very cosy relationships with destructive industries, and
as
we have seen with the IWC vote buying scandals (3) and
TEPCO’s single-page nuclear meltdown response plan for
Fukushima Daiichi (4), both have had severely negative
effects on the environment, the people and the
economy.”
“The Government can no longer ignore the embezzlement we exposed. It must fully investigate the whale meat scandal, finally end its support for the expensive, unwanted and unneeded whaling programme, and put the money wasted on it into recovering from the March 11 disaster, and rebuilding sustainable fishing communities along the East coast.”
Sato called on the International Whaling Commission, which has started its 63rd annual meeting, in Jersey, to end commercial whaling.
NOTES:
1) In
January 2008, Greenpeace began an investigation into insider
allegations that organised whale meat embezzlement was being
conducted by crew inside Japan's so-called ’scientific‘
whaling programme, which is funded by Japanese taxpayers.
The informer was previously involved in the whaling
programme, and as a result of his information, Junichi Sato
and Toru Suzuki began an investigation, eventually
discovering firm proof that cardboard boxes containing whale
meat were being secretly shipped to the homes of whaling
fleet crew - and then sold for personal profit. A box of
this whale meat was intercepted at a mail depot and
delivered to the Tokyo Prosecutors' Office in May 2008,
where Sato filed a report of embezzlement. However, the
embezzlement investigation was dropped on 20 June, and on
the same day both men were arrested and then held for 26
days, 23 of which were without
charge. The Tokyo Two, as
Sato and Suzuki are now known, were convicted of theft and
trespass on September 6, 2010, and sentenced to one year in
prison, suspended for three years.
On December 22, 2010,
the Fisheries Agency of Japan announced that it was
reprimanding five of its officials, and giving formal
warnings to two senior officials, for accepting whale meat
gifts from the industry – further confirming Sato and
Suzuki’s accusations of broad-scale
corruption. They
are now appealing the court’s decision.
The case of Sato
and Suzuki has generated significant international
attention, from senior political figures, including Nobel
Laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu, international human rights
groups and legal experts. During a visit to Japan last year,
the United Nations High
Commissioner on Human Rights,
Navi Pillay, expressed concern about the case particularly
with regard to freedom of expression and association. She
emphasised the importance of investigations by NGOs to
society in general and how their work should be
respected.
More: http://www.greenpeace.org/tokyo-two
2) In
December 2010 when officials from the Fisheries Agency of
Japan (FAJ) apologised for the misconduct of five officials
who accepted gifts of whale meat totalling approximately
US$3,000 – recognising the improprieties Sato and Suzuki
sought to expose existed. A further two key officials -
including the FAJ’s second in command and prominent
IWC
negotiator, Jun Yamashita - were handed warnings, as they
were ultimately responsible for the actions of their
staff.
Greenpeace response to FAJ apology: http://bit.ly/iczhrW
The box of embezzled meat Sato and Suzuki intercepted was worth $550 according to prosecutors – far less than what industry officials have now admitted to taking, and according to evidence and witness testimony from the Tokyo Two trial, what has been admitted is merely the tip of the iceberg.
Updated Whaling
on Trial Dossier detailing the entire Tokyo Two Case:
http://bit.ly/cWd211
3) Japan’s
vote-buying exposed
http://bit.ly/qde7oD
4) Tsunami plan
misjudged threat to nuke plant – ABC
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2011/06/28/3255931.htm