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News / Danish navy seize Sea Shepherd small boat

Danish naval vessel Knut Rasmussen in Lerwick harbour on Friday afternoon.

A DANISH naval vessel sailed into Lerwick harbour on Friday afternoon to impound the inflatable boat used by the environmental campaign group Sea Shepherd to disrupt the Faroese whale hunt, known as the Grindadráp.

At around 3pm the HDMS Knud Rasmussen entered the harbour and left again 30 minutes later with the small boat Echo on board.

The Echo had been seized from the Dutch-registered Sea Shepherd ship Sam Simon on 1 September by Lerwick police at the request of the Danish authorities, in response to a letter of request issued by the Faroese chief of police on 22August.

The seizure followed the small boat’s involvement in the defense of 61 pilot whales at a grindadráp at Sandavágur on 12 August.

On Thursday police informed Sea Shepherd’s lawyers that the Echo would be held for a week, giving the lawyers time to appeal the seizure.

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It was not until Friday that Sea Shepherd was advised that Danish authorities had fast tracked extradition proceedings in an effort to obtain the small boat.

Queens Council representing Sea Shepherd then lodged a “Bill Of Suspension” to block the extradition of the small boat.

At approximately 3.43pm the High Court issued a warrant granting the suspension, however, the small boat was already on board the Rasmussen, en route to Faroe Islands.

No effort was made to retrieve the Echo from the Rasmussen.

Sea Shepherd global chief executive Alex Cornelissen said: “It seems that there is no level that Denmark won’t stoop to in order to continue its support of the pilot whale slaughter in the Faroe Islands.

“However, if the Danish government thinks that by confiscating the Echo they will stop Sea Shepherd, they are very sadly mistaken.”

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