Two ships are seen navigating through foggy waters, with one vessel, named Antarctic Sea, positioned alongside another smaller ship.

Two ships are seen navigating through foggy waters, with one vessel, named Antarctic Sea, positioned alongside another smaller ship.
Activist ship MV Bandero purposely rams fishing trawler – Screengrab from Aker Qrill Company video

‘Eco-warriors’ are getting increasingly more violent in their interventions.

While the eyes of the world are focused on the wars in Iran and Ukraine, or on Arctic tensions around Greenland, down in the waters around Antarctica, a conflict is developing that pits commercial fishing and environmental activism against each other.

On Wednesday (April 1st), a ship operated by a group founded by anti-whaling activist Paul Watson collided with an industrial fishing trawler in Antarctica.

The trawler’s Norwegian owner called it a ‘deliberate attack’ that endangered its crew and could’ve caused a disaster in the same waters the activists profess to want to protect.

CBS News reported:

“A two-minute video […] by the Aker QRILL Co. shows the moment Tuesday when the M/V Bandero, operated by the Captain Paul Watson Foundation, slowly steams toward the stern of the fishing vessel, hitting its port side at a slight angle.

The collision underscores the growing battle in the frigid waters of the Southern Ocean over the future of Antarctic krill, a shrimplike crustacean central to the diet of whales and critical buffer to global warming that’s also in demand for use in health supplements, fishmeal and other products.”

The Bandero almost struck a diesel tank on the fishing trawler, putting at risk the many whale species, as well as seals and seabirds.

“’Our crew were put at risk in some of the most remote waters on Earth, and only luck avoided potential environmental damage’, Aker CEO Webjørn Barstad said in a statement. ‘If the steel plates (…) had ruptured, it could have caused a spill. It was probably just luck that it didn’t cause more damage’, Barstad told the Reuters news agency.”

The Paul Watson Foundation said their actions are ‘aggressive nonviolence’.

“Watson himself was not on the ship, which departed Australia in February as part of what the Watson foundation called Operation Krill Wars.”

Watch:

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The post FISHING WARS: Environment Activists Ram Their Boat on Krill Trawler in ‘Deliberate Attack’, as Conflict Intensifies in the Frigid Antarctica Waters (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.