Comments
-
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
-
They see me trawlin, they hatin...
-
shut the f**k up! the government have set their quota to what it is for a reason! why would they set a quota to more than the environment can handle?! i live in lincoln and the whole tuna industry are supporting it! everyone is going on about the bi catch it leaves but they dont realize that any other trawler still has bi catch aswell. i dont see the problem! instead of 10 different boats to do the job the company has chosen one. they are not foshing every day! they would use their quota to quik
-
I didn't realised how brave the Greenpeace people were - they could easily have been crushed between the ship and the wharf - nice piece of rigid-inflatable boat handling; and what is the pilot boat doing trying to stop them - they are not the police, they should not have interfered. Thank goodness SOMEONE is taking action to try and stop this monster. Go, you good things!!!
2m 5sLength
On 30 August Greenpeace activists in a small inflatable boat take on the enormous super trawler, Margiris, as it attempts to sneak into port at Port Lincoln, South Australia. The Margiris arrives in Australia under a cloud of controversy as environmentalists, fishing groups and community members unite to protect Australia's oceans.