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'Deepest regret': 30 years on, French secret agent apologises for sinking the Rainbow Warrior

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The bombed hull of the Greenpeace flagship Rainbow Warrior.  The ship was sabotaged by the French secret service in the port of Auckland on July 9, 1985, to stop it from protesting against nuclear testing at France's Pacific Mururoa Atoll.  File photo: AFP

The French secret service frogman who attached the mines which sank the Greenpeace flagship Rainbow Warrior in New Zealand 30 years ago apologised for his actions in an interview Sunday with investigative website Mediapart.

Jean-Luc Kister, whose face was not covered in the hour-long video interview, said he believed it was now the right time to say sorry to the family of Portuguese photographer Fernando Pereira, who was killed in the explosion, to Greenpeace and to the people of New Zealand.

“Thirty years after the event, now that emotions have subsided and also with the distance I now have from my professional life, I thought it was the right time for me to express both my deepest regret and my apologies,” Kister said.

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Jean Luc Kister
Jean Luc Kister

On July 10, 1985, the Rainbow Warrior was docked in Auckland on its way to protest against French nuclear testing at Mururoa Atoll, about 1,200 kilometres southeast of Tahiti.

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Kister was working for France’s spy agency, the DGSE, which carried out an unprecedented mission to stop Greenpeace by bombing a peaceful protest ship without warning in the waters of a friendly nation.

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