Anchorage, United States —
Following last year's "St. Kitts Declaration", which mumbled that the moratorium on commercial whaling might not be necessary anymore, the anti-whaling countries have bounced back with a 37-4 vote for a resolution strengthening the commercial whaling ban.
This was a major victory for the voices of whale conservation worldwide.
At last year's meeting, 33 countries - led by pro-whaling Japan - voted in favour of the "St. Kitts Declaration," essentially an attempt to restart commercial whaling, which has been banned since 1986.
That
temporary, one-vote whaling majority was a wake up call, and as Japan
continued to recruit votes in support of their position, often with
lucrative aid packages, Greenpeace and other conservation
organisations, like-minded countries, and whale supporters all over the
world responded with their own efforts to ensure that the true
opposition to whaling worldwide was reflected at this year's
meeting.
We launched a website dedicated to enabling those who opposed whaling to be part of those efforts: I-GO/Defending the whales. Whale defenders who signed up at that site helped to motivate
countries around the world to protect the whales. Recent
months saw several countries joining or rejoining, like Peru,
Cyprus, Slovenia, Croatia, Greece, Costa Rica and Ecuador - or even declaring they would swap
sides to vote for the whales, like Nicaragua.
In addition, there were Big Blue Marches all over the world in support of whales - in New Zealand and
Australia, India, Argentina, Ecuador, Netherlands, Peru, Spain, US,
UK, France, Portugal, Columbia, Venezuela, Germany, Brazil, Mexico,
Costa Rica, Chile, Mexico, Morocco, Romania, Sweden, Singapore, Turkey -
the list goes on and on!
And in Japan, the Whale Love Wagon
reached out to the Japanese public in a very different voice, exploring
the whaling issue from the perspective of former whalers, people
who still eat whale meat, and Japanese youth. The latest instalment,
an animation from academy-award nominee Koshi Yamamura, tells the story
of a Japanese headmaster who saves a whale, repaying a debt he feels
for the days when whales saved the Japanese people from starvation
following World War II. "Once they saved us -- now it is our turn to
save them" he says in this tiny, beautiful story.
What we didn't win
Yet
while we achieved the major objective of maintaining the moratorium,
the meeting was not entirely a success. The functional extinction of an
entire species, the Baiji dolphin, - got just fifteen minutes of fame at the meeting, at the Anchorage's Captain Cook Hotel, which has just drawn to a close.
The Vaquita,
the Mexican dolphin likely to become extinct in the near future, also
garnered little mention. And there was no discussion whatsoever about
the estimated 3,288 cetaceans that have died as bycatch from fishing
vessels worldwide since the 59th IWC meeting started four days ago, or
through human causes like ship strikes, pollution, bycatch and climate
change.
Instead, a huge chunk of meeting was spent arguing over
the resumption of commercial whaling, with Japan's JARPA II "scientific
whaling" hunt later this year drawing censure from most countries.
Japan aims to kill 50 threatened humpback whales in the Southern Ocean
later this year, and the "Resolution on Jarpa" with 40 countries voting against Japan's "research" expeditions - which are really just commercial whaling in disguise.
Japan
also proposed a resolution that its coastal whaling communities should
be allowed to engage in commercial whaling, because of its similarity
to subsistence hunts by indigenous people in other countries. The
problem is, for the last decade, the UN has repeatedly, and
unsuccessfully, requested Japan's government to recognise the rights of
Japan's own indigenous people - the Ainu
- in the north of Japan, so it's hard to see how they can claim empathy
with indigenous people elsewhere. Japan eventually withdrew the
proposal.
Sore losers
Japan routinely threatens to leave the IWC every year that it
doesn't go well for them, and this year was no exception. This year
they said they want to start another whaling organisation, and to start
coastal whaling.
Jun Hoshikawa, executive director of Greenpeace Japan said that this was just posturing by Japan.
"Japan
can't just walk away - whaling isn't such a big business in Japan that
other important international relationships can be compromised".
The
meeting, IWC 59, kicked off on Monday with Japan requesting everyone to
act "civilly." That sentiment didn't go too far - there was soon a wave
of so-called "hate votes" - the refusal of pro-whaling countries to
participate in votes they didn't like the look of; threats to walk away
from the whole process from Japan, and an almost total failure of all
members to consider in detail the real threats to whales and dolphins.
Finally,
the IWC's member nations have agreed to a special meeting to discuss
reform of the organisation. But unless "reform" means actually
modernising the IWC to properly address the major threats to cetaceans
- which kill one animal every 90 seconds - and stop the most
preventable cause – hunting - then that meeting will just become
another soapbox for political grandstanding, where the only victims
will be the whales.