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Star of dolphin-killing film detained at Tokyo airport

In this Nov

Yuri Kageyama (The Jakarta Post)
Tokyo
Tue, January 19, 2016

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Star of dolphin-killing film detained at Tokyo airport In this Nov. 2, 2010, file photo, Ric O'Barry, a leading global dolphin activist whose efforts to save dolphins is documented in the Oscar-winning film "The Cove," holds "Stop" and "Keep out except persons concerned" signs as he arrives at Taiji Community Center in Taiji, western Japan. O’Barry, the former dolphin trainer for the “Flipper” TV series and the star of an Oscar-winning documentary about dolphin killings in Japan, was detained Tuesday by immigration authorities at an airport near Tokyo. (AP/Koji Sasahara) (AP/Koji Sasahara)

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span class="inline inline-center">In this Nov. 2, 2010, file photo, Ric O'Barry, a leading global dolphin activist whose efforts to save dolphins is documented in the Oscar-winning film "The Cove," holds "Stop" and "Keep out except persons concerned" signs as he arrives at Taiji Community Center in Taiji, western Japan. O'€™Barry, the former dolphin trainer for the '€œFlipper'€ TV series and the star of an Oscar-winning documentary about dolphin killings in Japan, was detained Tuesday by immigration authorities at an airport near Tokyo. (AP/Koji Sasahara)

The star of an Oscar-winning documentary "The Cove," about a dolphin-killing village in Japan, was detained Tuesday by immigration authorities at Tokyo's Narita international airport.

Ric O'Barry, the former dolphin trainer for the "Flipper" TV series, said immigration officials told him he wasn't a tourist, the visa he was using to enter Japan, according to his lawyer, Takashi Takano. He said officials accused O'Barry of having close ties with the anti-whaling group Sea Shepherd, which O'Barry denies.

Immigration officials said it is their policy not to comment on individual cases.

Takano said he appealed the detention, and that the Japanese government will decide on whether to allow O'Barry into the country or deport him. The timeframe for that decision wasn't clear.

"The Cove," which won the 2009 Academy Award for best documentary, shows the slaughter of dolphins herded into a cove in the fishing village of Taiji and bludgeoned to death.

"The Japanese government is cracking down on those who oppose their war on dolphins," O'Barry said in a statement sent by email to The Associated Press through his son, Lincoln O'Barry.

Officials in Taiji, a small fishing village in central Japan, and fishermen have defended the hunt as tradition, saying that eating dolphin meat is no different than eating beef or chicken.

Most Japanese have never eaten dolphin meat, and many say they are horrified by the dolphin-killing, and have joined the campaign against the Taiji hunt. Animal welfare activists say the dolphin hunt is driven mostly by the lucrative sale of dolphins to aquariums, with the meat sale income coming as a smaller extra.

O'Barry has been stopped and questioned at Japanese immigration before, as well as temporarily taken into custody by local police on the suspicion of not having proper travel documents. But this is the first time he has been detained in this way. He has the support of high-profile celebrities, including Sting, U.S. Ambassador to Japan Caroline Kennedy and former Guns N' Roses drummer Matt Sorum. (kes)

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