Rainbow Warrior 

Rainbow Warrior 20th Anniversary weblog

After returning from the Tasman Sea deep sea bottom trawling campaign, the Rainbow Warrior is sailing from Auckland to Matauri Bay to commemorate the 20th Anniversary of the bombing.

The next few days will be blogged here - live from the ship ....

July 11, 2005

Rock'n'Roll and Anti-Nuke Prime Ministers

Singing Anchor Me
Singing Anchor Me - Kirsten Morelle and Che Fu. © Greenpeace/Walsh

What a hectic Sunday! After the ceremonies at dawn and at the site of the old Warrior, the day had already seemed long. But by 11am, I was in my bare feet, helping pull the Waka Nui ashore in beautiful Matauri Bay, the masts of the Rainbow Warrior just visible near the Cavalli Islands - then a party of us headed by back to Auckland, where we had a reception at the St. James Hall, on Queens St.

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Video footage from Matauri Bay commemoration

This is a short clip taken on board and beneath the Rainbow Warrior in Matauri Bay during the commemoration ceremony on the 10th July

Paris: 500 Rainbow Warriors


About 40 of us took a loooooooooooong bus ride from Amsterdam to Paris to help mark the anniversary of the bombing of the Rainbow Warrior. We were a bit late in arriving, and the briefings for how we were going to turn a crowd of people and a bunch of T-shirts into a message of peace had already begun. I walked into this massive warehouse on a farm outside of Paris and my jaw dropped. There were more than 500 people there, and it was chocker block. They were young, old, all races all colours. There were rasta dreads and crew cuts, high heels and Doc Martens. And they were all there to say something to the world about peace. What a bunch of naive hippies. I nearly wept with pride to count myself among them.

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July 10, 2005

Two Warriors at Matauri Bay

Sunrise on leaving Whangaroa - Abri on the Rainbow Warrior
Sunrise on leaving Whangaroa - Abri on the Rainbow Warrior. © Greenpeace/Walsh


We had a very early start this morning - and I mean early. We were tumbled out of our bunks 5am, to prepare for the day ahead. Last night we had a bit of a party on board - the crews of the other yachts in our flotilla came on board, as did lots of people from around Whangaroa. With all the talk and music and food on deck, many of us had seen the wrong side of midnight.

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July 9, 2005

Rainbow Warrior Reaches Whangaroa

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The Rainbow Warrior arrives in Whangaroa Harbour. © Greenpeace/Walsh
Night is drawing in here, in Whangaroa Harbour. I'm sitting in the radio room of the Rainbow Warrior, but the ship is milling with people. We're alongside the wharf in this small community, in some of the most beautiful landscape I've ever been privileged to encounter. Next to us is the sailing ship Ranui, and Hank's Tiama is due alongside in a few minutes.

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Hello Planet Earth!

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Xavier, Greenpeace France Anti-Nuclear Campaigner © Greenpeace/Walsh

Hello planet earth, Xavier speaking, live from the new Rainbow Warrior. It's the most famous boat of the Greenpeace fleet, back on sea, stronger than ever, and faithful to its commitment to keep on struggling for a better and greener world. We're here somewhere north of New Zealand, to commemorate the bombing of the old Rainbow Warrior.

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A report from Steve on board the Tiama

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The crew of the Tiama leave Auckland yesterday. Steve Sawyer is on the right. © Greenpeace/Walsh

A sunny lunchtime - just passing Cape Brett at the southern end of the Bay of Islands. We’re all gathered in the wheelhouse of Henk Haazen's expedition yacht Tiama for lunch, after a rather snotty night coming up from Auckland. When Ruby and I came up on watch at 0400 this morning, John summed things up as 'extremely unpleasant', which was extremely accurate - screeching rain squalls, low visibility, and spray washing over the cabin top into the cockpit, inevitably ending up down the back of the neck.

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Martini - 'All kinds of thought are racing through my mind'

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Martini Gotje on board the Rainbow Warrior at Matauri Bay. © Greenpeace/Walsh

Tomorrow it is 20 years since the Rainbow Warrior and Fernando got killed by an act of (French) state-sponsored terrorism.

We just sailed past Matauri Bay, where the Warrior was laid to rest. All kinds of thought are racing through my mind.

To 1973 when I first went to Moruroa and met Francis Sanford, the Tahitian delegate to the French parliament and a tireless fighter to stop the tests.

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Wakeup Call to the World

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Anne Summers on board the Rainbow Warrior at Whanaoroa, New Zealand © Greenpeace/Walsh

It's Saturday morning, a clear and sunny day as we head north towards Matauri Bay. This is my first time on the Rainbow Warrior. Hey, it's my first time on a boat and I feel very privileged to be here and to be part of an incredible group that is about to commemorate one of the landmark occasions in Greenpeace's history. The bombing of the Rainbow Warrior was like a wakeup call to the world - and the world still remembers. In recent weeks, I have been telling people that I would be sailing on the second Rainbow Warrior as part of the marking of the bombing of the first one. I have not met a single person, of any age, who has not heard of what happened back in 1985. Most people are staggered that twenty years has passed since it happened . ‘Was it really twenty years ago?' they say. It seems like just yesterday. Recalling what happened also helps people renew their resolve to keep on fighting against environmental injustice - in whatever form it takes.

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Rainbow Warriors and Doers

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Pete Willcox on board the Rainbow Warrior in Whangaroa. © Greenpeace/Walsh

Pete, you were skipper of the Rainbow Warrior when it was attacked in Auckland harbour in 1985. You must have mixed feelings about coming back here to commemorate the it, twenty years later?

Hey, any excuse for a party dude!...Twenty years ago was not a happy time for us. I am enjoying seeing a number of old shipmates who I have not seen in years.

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July 8, 2005

Anyone can be a Rainbow Warrior

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Naomi, 2nd Mate on the Rainbow Warrior.
© Greenpeace/Pullman

As someone who campaigned against nuclear testing in the past, what does it feel like to be now a crew member of the Rainbow Warrior, 20 years later?

The success of Greenpeace as a major international organization is an accepted fact now, but for me the biggest contrast compares not 20, but 30 years ago, when I was first involved with Greenpeace, sailing to Mururoa Atoll. Back then, all peace and environment organizations were fringe shoestring organizations, and there was no reason to believe that Greenpeace's future would be any different.

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Symbolizing the struggle to save our fragile world

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Abri, assistant Radio Operator on the Rainbow Warrior.
© Greenpeace/Pullman

So what's it like to be on board the Rainbow Warrior?
It is an absolutely amazing feeling to be crew on a ship that has a history like the Rainbow Warrior. Even though I wasn't yet born when the first Warrior was bombed, I can feel the reverberations of the attack through the people on board who was there when it happened and in the Rainbow Warrior itself.

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Departing Auckland - 20 Years On

Marelle Pereira with the Rainbow Warrior's accompanying flotilla, Auckland Harbour.<br />
© Greenpeace/Walsh

Marelle Pereira with the Rainbow Warrior's accompanying flotilla, Auckland Harbour. © Greenpeace/Walsh

The Rainbow Warrior pulls away from Prince's Wharf, Auckland, accompanied by tug boats, yachts and sailing ships and cheers from the quayside. It's July 8th, two days short of twenty years since its predecessor was sunk at nearby Marsden Wharf as it prepared to sail to Moruroa in protest to French nuclear testing. Fernando Pereira, the photographer on board, died tragically in the incident.

On board are 28 people, amongst them Pete Willcox and Martini Gotje, skipper and 1st mate, respectively, of the original Warrior in 1985. Marelle Pereira - daughter of Fernando, and her partner, Matt.

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June 16, 2005

Memories of a Warrior

In the 27 years that the Rainbow Warrior has sailed the oceans of the world it has touched many people's hearts.

On this page you can read people's memories of the Warrior and also post your own ...

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Listen to the song