COPENHAGEN –
Denmark released anti-whaling activist Paul Watson from detention on Tuesday and said it had rejected a Japanese request to extradite him over criminal charges dating back more than a decade.
U.S.-Canadian Watson, 74, founder of the Sea Shepherd conservationist group and the Captain Paul Watson Foundation, was released in Greenland’s capital Nuuk, police in the autonomous Danish territory said.
Watson was apprehended when his ship docked in Greenland in July.
“Paul is free !!!,” Sea Shepherd France wrote on social media platform X.
Denmark’s justice ministry said it had based its decision on an overall assessment, including the age of the case and in particular an uncertainty over whether time spent in Greenland detention could be deducted from any final sentence in Japan.
“Based on correspondence with the Japanese authorities on this matter, the Ministry of Justice believes that it cannot be assumed with the necessary certainty that this will be the case,” Justice Minister Peter Hummelgaard said in a statement.
Japan had issued an international warrant for Watson’s arrest, seeking him on charges of breaking into a Japanese vessel in the Antarctic Ocean in 2010, obstructing its business and causing injury as well as property damage.
A spokesperson for Japan’s embassy in Copenhagen declined to comment. Japan’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Watson’s lawyer Julie Stage said she was satisfied with the decision.
“We think it has taken a long time, but the most important thing is that it ends with the right decision,” Stage said.
“He was happy and relieved but incredibly calm, which he has been throughout the whole process,” she said after speaking with Watson on Tuesday.
Watson has enjoyed strong support in France where he has been residing with his family since 2023, with a campaign for his release enlisting the support of French President Emmanuel Macron andactress Brigitte Bardot.
(Reporting by Louise Breusch Rasmussen, Isabelle Yr Carlsson and Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen in Copenhagen; Additional reporting by Kaori Kaneko in Tokyo; Editing by Terje Solsvik, Jan Harvey and Mark Porter)