
During the 20th century alone, more than 1.4 million whales have been killed. In the process, commercial whaling systematically depleted whale population after whale population. Estimates indicate that the impacts of previous commercial whaling led to the reduction of whale populations, leaving species such as the Humpback Whale down to 10%, the Blue Whale down to less than 4% from "pre-exploitation numbers", the Gray Whale down to 12%, the Right Whale down to 6%. All of these whales are among at least 7 whale species listed as Endangered. These numbers may be shocking, but also disturbing is the fact that scientists from outside of Japan have purchased whale meats from Japanese markets to find DNA results indicating that Humpback, Blue, and Sei whale meats are still being sold.
Signed in the 1940s, forming the International Whaling Commission, the Convention on Whaling, is a gentleman's agreement without provisions for enforcement. Of the great whales, only the Antarctic Minkes were spared and only as a result of the worldwide moratorium on commercial whaling coming into force in 1986. Now more than a decade after enactment of the moratorium, Japan and Norway continue their whaling programs which directly undermine this cornerstone international conservation decision.
Since 1987, Japan has been conducting it's whaling under the guise of "scientific whaling". And yet, after criticisms of this practice comes the statement: "This whole thing must be seen from the larger perspective of imposing another set of values on a culture," said Joji Morishita, deputy director of the far seas division at the Fisheries Agency of Japan. "Beef is sacred to many people in India, yet they don't ask the United States to stop eating beef," he said. "This is the way we view whaling." In fact, only after World War II, when food sources ran short did the Japanese commercial whaling industry begin providing whale meat. Was that for "science" or overnight "culture"?
Japan has used foreign
aid to encourage developing nations to join the IWC and vote in the country's
favor. ***
Focusing on small-island developing states with marine-focused economies and
marine-focused cultures, recent inductees to the commission include St. Vincent,
St. Lucia, Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, Additional nations which
voted along with Japan included Republic Of Guinea, Denmark, China, Korea,
Norway, and Panama. When the vote came up for the proposed sanctuaries, all
of these countries have sided with Japan on whaling issues, thereby defeating
the proposals. 
Despite the definition of the Southern Ocean Sanctuary, since the 1988 season (which includes the 1987-88 Antarctic season), over 20,000 minke whales have been killed as part of Japan's "scientific whaling" program. Around 3,000-4,000 metric tons (roughly 8.5 million pounds) of whale meat sold in Japan annually are a by-product of these research missions. The Whale and Conservation Society (WDCS) reports that since 1986, the IWC voted for a moratorium on whaling, Japan, Norway, and Iceland have slaughtered over 25,000 whales (click here to view WDCS video).
DNA samplings of whale meat sold in the Japanese markets have indicated that along with the "unprotected" Minke and dolphin (sold as whale meat), other "protected" species including Bryde's, Fin, Gray, Humpback, Sei, and Sperm Whale, were found. Without any enforcement, and a lack of witnesses out at sea, there is no regulation or protection. At the 55th meeting (summer 2003) of the International Whaling Commission (IWC), WDCS, alongside the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) and The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), have confirmed that despite emotional claims that Japan needs more whale meat, whale and dolphin meat is being sold in pet food in Japan.
Japan has added the Fin, Sei, Sperm whale & Bryde's whales to their list of whales killed annually under the guise of "Scientific Research". Once hunted to a point of depletion, being unviable commercially, the Sperm Whale is currently under protection. In recent literature on this particular species, the researchers stated that there was uncertainty that the Sperm Whale as a species would ever recover from the mass whaling that occurred nearly a century ago. In mid-November this year, the Japanese whaling fleet departed for Antarctica with intension to kill 50 Humpback whales in their quotas.
Japan's claim that the purpose for their "scientific research" is to calculate how much fish the whales eat. They claim that they need to gauge the impact of these whales competing against their own fishing fleets. However, a recent paper published by the US Department of Commerce concluded that "hunting whales is unlikely to provide increased catch of fish species because of the complexity of ecosystem interactions".
Despite strong disapproval expressed by the IWC, as well as by the governments of New Zealand, Australia, Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain, and President Clinton, Japan has again sent it's whaling ships out for the hunt. Norway, in their blatant defiance of the IWC, has continued to kill hundreds of Minke Whales each year. For the year 2006, Norway's self-created kill quota was set for 1052 whales. A total of 1,013 whales are targeted for Japan's kills in the year 2006.
In August (2003) Iceland announced that it would resume commercial whaling as part of a whaling programme that they are describing as 'scientific'." (Needless to say, Japan and Iceland began developing close relations in the past few years.) Between the commercial whale hunt quotas set by Norway (1,052 Minke), Iceland (50-70 Minke), and Japan (1,013 Minke, + 170 other species, 4 of the 6 are Endangered species noted above), approximately 2,285 whales will be killed this year.
Please CLICK HERE for update & actions that you can take.
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"Join our anti-whaling
campaign" From WDCS (Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society)
please
click here to view the video (Quicktime
7 required, click here for free download)
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Check This Page for Updates & Articles on this issue |
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"Whaling wars: a fight for life" The New Zealand Herald, 26 July '01 |
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| 10 April 2001 "...the government of St. Vincent openly acknowledges that Japan is helping the country to expand its cetacean fishing." Tourists Unwilling Witnesses to Caribbean Whale Kills |
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| What can commercial whaling do to whales? The Northern Right Whale (Eugalaena glacialis) "...all but eradicated by Norwegian whaling at the turn of the century. In the eastern North Pacific, it seems likely that the Soviets wiped out much of the remaining population in the early 1960's." Now listed as an Endangered Species, it is estimated that only about 300 of these whales remain. Scientists have expressed grave concern for this remnant population under threat due to high mortality from ship strikes and entaglement in fishing nets. | ||
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Photos: Courtesy of IFAW. Copyright IFAW. All Rights Reserved
| Click Here to listen to the KCRW radio (31 May 2007) online report "The Global Politics of Whaling" |
"International
Legal Experts Urge Action to End Japanese Whaling" 25 Oct. 2006 (Iceland's resumption of commercial whaling) "Iceland kills third Fin whale" 08/01/2006 "Japanese whalers slaughter pregnant animals": "The impact of Japanese whaling on whale populations could be greater than thought, with a report from Japanese whalers revealing that on average, 93.8 per cent of the 391 female minke whales killed last season were pregnant." "...a quota of 2,000 whales could be taken for about 100 years without impact on the population." says Tokyo-based Institute of Cetacean Research* , Dr Seiji Ohsumi. BBC News, 4 Oct. 2001 *NOTE: The ICR is funded by the profits from the sale of whale meat, which is also subsidized by the Japanese government. May 1 2002: * "Japan Plans to Hunt Endangered Sei Whales" 29 June 2002 (BBC News) "Japan admits buying allies on whaling" Special report: Japan Jonathan Watts in Tokyo Thursday July 19, 2001 "Defiant Whalers Take to the High Seas" WASHINGTON, DC, May 15, 2001 (ENS) - "The United States again is urging Japan not to take sperm and Bryde's whales for its expanded lethal scientific whaling program, the State Department said Monday. On May 10, Japanese whaling vessels left for the North Pacific to resume Japan's expanded lethal scientific whaling program. This marks the second year of Japan's two year expanded whaling program, which includes the taking of endangered sperm and Bryde's whales." |
| Norway Commercial Whaling Since Norway's resumption of commercial whaling in 1993, a total of 2,238 Minkes in the Barents Sea, Norwegian Sea and North Sea. Norway's self-created kill quota has increased from 600 to up to 711 whales for the year 2003. UPDATE 16 Jan. 2001: Norway has exempted itself from the ban on international trade on whale products... and will be exporting Whale products to Japan. (CLICK HERE for Update and Action Links regarding both Japan & Norway commercial whaling.) |
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