Japan deports ‘The Cove’ dolphin activist, Ric O’Barry

Screen Shot 2016-02-07 at 06.40.01US animal rights activist Ric O’Barry, detained for nearly three weeks after being denied entry to Japan, has been deported from the country, his supporters said Friday.

The star of the Oscar-winning documentary “The Cove” about dolphin killing in a town of Taiji, “has been placed on an airplane and deported from Japan, where he has been incarcerated for 19 days,” said a statement from Dolphin Project, a conservation group he heads.

O’Barry had been fighting for entry into Japan after immigration authorities refused to let him in last month and he was held at the airport until his departure.

Japanese immigration officials cited his past trip to an area where did not report to authorities when visiting Japan last year on a tourist visa, it said.

“It is ironic that they are deporting me to keep me quiet, when they themselves have brought more attention to the dolphin slaughter than ‘The Cove’ movie,” O’Barry said in the statement.

“It breaks my heart to be deported from a country I have grown to love.”

“The Cove”, which won an Academy Award in 2010, drew worldwide attention to the annual dolphin hunt in the small Japanese town of Taiji.

The 76-year-old O’Barry lost more than 10 kilogrammes (22 pounds) and suffered a minor chest problem during his stay at a “jail-like facility of the Immigration Bureau at Narita Airport, Tokyo,” Dolphin Project lawyer Takashi Takano said in the same statement.

“Mr O’Barry’s visits to ‘The Cove’ in Taiji and his reports on dolphin hunting should be considered a legitimate tourist activity,” Takano said.

“To those who believe Japan is an open and democratic country, it must be shocking to realise this kind of experience can happen here and now.”

 

Full story: Yahoo

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