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A Dawn Service To Commemorate The Bombing Of The Rainbow Warrior In Auckland

A Dawn Service To Commemorate The Bombing Of The Rainbow Warrior In Auckland

Scoop07-07-2025
'You can't sink a rainbow.'
The iconic Greenpeace flagship Rainbow Warrior will sail into Auckland today to mark the 40th anniversary of the bombing of the original Rainbow Warrior on 10 July 1985.
A dawn ceremony of remembrance will be hosted by Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei on board the Rainbow Warrior from 7am on 10 July 2025 at Halsey Street Wharf in the Viaduct.
Speakers include:
Russel Norman, Greenpeace Aotearoa executive directorTui Warmenhoven, Ngati Porou, Greenpeace Aotearoa board chair
Sharon Hawke, Ngāti Whātua ŌrākeiCarmen Gravatt, Greenpeace International programme director
Stephanie Mills, former Greenpeace nuclear campaigner
The Rainbow Warrior comes fresh from confronting bottom trawlers off the East Coast of New Zealand on the Chatham Rise, a biodiversity hotspot under threat from the destructive fishing practice of bottom trawling. Activists from the Rainbow Warrior painted the words Ocean Killer on a Talley's bottom trawling vessel and then again on a Sealord vessel. In response to the painting in June.
Russel Norman says, 'The Rainbow Warrior's return to Aotearoa comes at a pivotal moment as the fight to protect our planet's fragile life-support systems has never been more urgent.
'On a planetary scale, climate change, ecosystem collapse, and accelerating species extinction pose an existential threat to us all, while here in Aotearoa, our Government is waging an all-out war on nature.
'As we remember the bombing of the Rainbow Warrior and the murder of Fernando Pereira onboard that night 40 years ago, it's important to remember why the French Government committed such an extreme act of violence.
'They targeted our ship because Greenpeace and the campaign to stop nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific were so effective. We posed a threat to the French Government's military programme and colonial power in the Pacific.
'And it's critical to remember that they failed to stop us. They failed to intimidate us, and they failed to silence us.
'We showed that you can't sink a rainbow. We showed that courage is contagious. Greenpeace only grew stronger and continued the successful campaign against nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific.
'That lesson is important because now, forty years on, we are just as effective, and it is the fossil fuel industry and the billionaire oligarchs who try to stop us. This time, not with bombs but with armies of lawyers and legal attacks of the kind that right now could threaten the very existence of Greenpeace in the US and beyond.
'But just like in 1985 when the French bombed our ship, now too in 2025, we are showing that we can not be intimidated, we will not back down, and we will not be silenced.
'The Rainbow Warrior has sailed ever since as a symbol of resistance in action. And we cannot be silenced because we are a movement of people committed to peace and to protecting Earth's ability to sustain life, protecting the blue oceans, the forests and the life we share this planet with,' says Norman.
Following the anniversary, the Rainbow Warrior will be open to the public for tours and talks with the crew on the weekends of 12 July and 19th July.
A multi-billion-dollar US-based oil pipeline company, Energy Transfer, has brought two back-to-back SLAPP suits against Greenpeace International and Greenpeace in the US, after Greenpeace US showed solidarity with the 2016 peaceful Indigenous-led protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline. The first case was dismissed, but the Greenpeace organisations continue to defend against the second case, which is ongoing after a North Dakota jury recently awarded over 660 million USD in damages to the pipeline giant.
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New Caledonia's Oldest Pro-Independence Party Denounces 'Bougival' Deal
New Caledonia's Oldest Pro-Independence Party Denounces 'Bougival' Deal

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time2 days ago

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New Caledonia's Oldest Pro-Independence Party Denounces 'Bougival' Deal

, Correspondent French Pacific Desk New Caledonia's oldest pro-independence party, the Union Calédonienne (UC), on Thursday officially rejected a political agreement signed in Paris last month. The text, bearing the signatures of all of New Caledonia's political parties represented at the local Congress, a total of 18 leaders, both pro-France and pro-independence, is described as a "project" for an agreement that would shape New Caledonia's political future. Since it was signed in the city of Bougival (West of Paris) on 12 July, after ten days of intense negotiations, it has been dubbed a "bet on trust" and has been described by French Minister for Overseas Manuel Valls as a commitment from all signing parties to report to their respective bases and explain its contents. 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In a de facto split, the two main moderate pillars of FLNKS, UPM and PALIKA, at the same time, distanced themselves from the pro-independence UC-dominated platform, materialising a rift within the pro-independence umbrella. The FLNKS is scheduled to hold an extraordinary meeting on 9 August 2025 (it was initially scheduled to be held on 2 August), to "highlight the prospects of the pursuit of dialogue through a repositioning of the pro-independence movement's political orientations". Valls: 'I'm not giving up' Reacting to the latest UC statements, Valls told French media he called UC "on a great sense of responsibility". "If tomorrow there was to be no agreement, it would mean the future, hope, would be put into question. Investment, including for the nickel mining industry, would no longer be possible." "I'm not giving up. Union Calédonienne has chosen to reject, as it stands, the Bougival accord project. I take note of this, but I profoundly regret this position." 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The riots caused 14 dead, hundreds of injured and an estimated financial cost of more than €2 billion in material damage.

Black pantyhose helped NZ police nail French spies – Rainbow Warrior: A Forgotten History
Black pantyhose helped NZ police nail French spies – Rainbow Warrior: A Forgotten History

NZ Herald

time3 days ago

  • NZ Herald

Black pantyhose helped NZ police nail French spies – Rainbow Warrior: A Forgotten History

Jean Luc Kister, one of the pair of combat divers who planted the bombs on the Rainbow Warrior, explains that the team was given orders to drop the bottles in Auckland Harbour. Although the air was let out, the bottles still washed up. Maurice Whitham, who was second in command of the investigation, says that gave police a lead to follow. They contacted France's Nato allies, the British Navy, who gave them a dive bottle supplied only to the French military. 'Our scientists went through this whole thing of checking the bottles found in Auckland Harbour with the one given to us from the British. The construction of the thing was identical.' The second part of the match, involving the pantyhose, fell to young Constable Nick Hall, who spoke French and had been sent to Paris as part of a small police team. Whitham recalls that Hall was tasked with buying 'some black pantyhose like grandma would wear with the seam down the back. And so he was going around all these shops. We suspected he was being followed wherever he went.' Whitham laughs about it now. 'They must have been thinking 'he's pretty kinky this fella''. Ultimately, after Hall brought home about a dozen samples, scientists discovered one pair was an identical match to the pantyhose on the oxygen bottle. They were made on a very old 1945 machine and never exported from France. As Whitham put it, 'Suddenly we were getting there...' Kister and the other diver had escaped, so linking the bottles and the pantyhose back to France was important for the police case against DGSE officers Alain Mafart and Dominique Prieur, who still denied involvement in the bombing. The oxygen bottle wrapped in black pantyhose used by the French spies who bombed the Rainbow Warrior. Photo / Maurice Whitham Meanwhile, the police team in Paris found the early co-operation from their French counterparts had mysteriously dried up, apparently because of orders from higher up. They were getting most of their useful information from the French newspapers, which Hall translated for his colleagues each day. They did not know at the time that behind the scenes, Pierre Verbrugghe, a high-ranking French police officer was pushing French journalist Edwy Plenel towards the truth. Plenel, who explained Verbrugghe's crucial role to the Rainbow Warrior: A Forgotten History series, says he met several times with his police source, but the most important meeting was in a Paris restaurant. Plenel said they had 'a very long conversation with good cooking and many, many alcohols, very long in the night and you don't take notes, you must remember what he said'. The story about a previously unknown third team in the Rainbow Warrior operation – published by Le Monde the week after that boozy restaurant meeting – would break open the case and lead to the French Government admitting guilt. Rainbow Warrior: A Forgotten History is a six-episode true crime series. Follow the series on iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes are released on Thursdays. The series is hosted and produced by John Daniell and Noelle McCarthy of Bird of Paradise Productions in co-production with the NZ Herald. Rainbow Warrior: A Forgotten History is supported by NZ on Air.

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