In 1977 the ship was acquired by
Greenpeace UK at a cost of £37,000 and underwent a four-month refit. It was re-launched on 2 May 1978 as
Rainbow Warrior. The ship was named by Greenpeace co-founder
Susi Newborn after the book
Warriors of the Rainbow which she had been given by another
Greenpeace co-founder,
Robert Hunter. After a series of high-profile campaigns in the North Atlantic, including two escapes from captivity in Spain resulting in the resignation of the Admiral of the Spanish Navy,
Rainbow Warrior made its way to North America where it underwent modification in 1981 and the fitting of sails in a
ketch rig in 1985. In early 1985,
Rainbow Warrior was in the Pacific Ocean campaigning against nuclear testing. In May, it relocated 300
Marshall Islanders from
Rongelap Atoll, which had been polluted by radioactive fallout from past American nuclear tests at the
Pacific Proving Grounds. It then travelled to
New Zealand to lead a flotilla of
yachts protesting against
French nuclear testing at the
Mururoa Atoll in the
Tuamotu Archipelago of
French Polynesia. During previous nuclear tests at Mururoa, protest ships had been boarded by French
commandos after sailing into the shipping exclusion zone around the atoll. For the 1985 tests, Greenpeace intended to monitor the impact of nuclear tests and place protesters on the island to monitor the blasts.
DGSE agent Christine Cabon infiltrated the Auckland offices of the organisation and secretly monitored communications from
Rainbow Warrior, collected maps, and investigated underwater equipment. French agents posing as interested supporters or tourists also toured the ship while it was open to public viewing.
Bombing of Rainbow Warrior , Northland
Rainbow Warrior, then captained by
Peter Willcox, was sabotaged and sunk just before midnight NZST on 10 July 1985, by two explosive devices attached to the hull by operatives of the French intelligence service (
DGSE). One of the twelve people on board, photographer
Fernando Pereira, returned to the ship after the first explosion to attempt to retrieve his equipment, and was killed when the ship was sunk by the second, larger explosion. A homicide inquiry began after the arrests of two French agents. The revelations of French involvement caused a political scandal and the French Minister of Defence
Charles Hernu resigned. The captured French agents were imprisoned, but later transferred to French custody. They were confined to the French military base on the
Island of Hao for a brief period before being released. After facing international pressure, France agreed to pay compensation to Greenpeace, and later admissions from the former head of the DGSE revealed that three teams had carried out the bombings. In addition to those successfully prosecuted, two DGSE divers, Jacques Camurier and Alain Tonel, had carried out the actual bombing, but their identities have never been officially confirmed. On 22 September 1985, the French Prime Minister
Laurent Fabius summoned journalists to his office to read a 200-word statement in which he said: "The truth is cruel," and acknowledged there had been a cover-up, he went on to say that "Agents of the French secret service sank this boat. They were acting on orders." Following the sinking, Greenpeace and the French Republic entered into an agreement to submit Greenpeace's claims against France to international arbitration. The arbitral tribunal, seated in Geneva, Switzerland, was composed of three members (Professor Claude Reymond, Sir
Owen Woodhouse and Professor François Terre) and rendered an award in 1987 in favour of Greenpeace, ordering France to pay it US$8.1 million.
David McTaggart, Greenpeace's chairman, described the award as "a great victory for those who support the right of peaceful protest and abhor the use of violence." Greenpeace was represented by
Lloyd Cutler and
Gary Born of
Wilmer Cutler & Pickering. The hull is now covered with a large colony of varicoloured
sea anemones. The masts were salvaged and now stand outside the
Dargaville Museum. A second ship, also named
Rainbow Warrior, was acquired in 1989 whilst a
third ship of the same name was built from scratch and launched in October 2011. ==Literature==