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SOUTHERN JAPAN
The whaling ship Nisshin-maru departs from Aruka port, Shimonoseki, Southern Japan together with a fleet of four
catcher ships bound for the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary with the intention of killing 1,000 whales. Greenpeace
called upon the Fisheries Agency of Japan (FAJ) and the companies behind the whaling to immediately recall the
fleet and cancel the cull.
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International —
It’s that time of the year again, the six ships of the whaling fleet are leaving Japan and heading back to the culling ground, the “Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary,” to carry out “scientific testing” on 1000 whales. The “scientific test” involves harpooning the whale, measuring and weighing the carcass, slicing and dicing, and finally delivering it to markets, boxed and frozen.
The
International Whaling Commission (IWC) banned commercial whaling in 1986. The
Southern Ocean was declared a Whale Sanctuary in 1994. Yet
every year the Fisheries Agency of
Japan (FAJ) sends the fleet of whalers back to the Southern Ocean via a
loophole in international law. The IWC has said it does not need the
data produced by the ‘research’ and strongly urges Japan to call it
off. The scale of the hunt leads only to one conclusion, that this is
commercial whaling.
“Sanctuary means refuge or safe haven, yet this year nearly 1,000
whales will receive neither from the whaler’s harpoon,” warned John
Frizell of Greenpeace International. “The Sanctuary is there to help
whales recover after over a century of relentless persecution sent
populations plummeting. Japan should join all other countries in
respecting the Sanctuary.”
Earlier this year, the FAJ announced at the annual meeting of the IWC
its intention to more than double its "scientific" cull to 935 minke
whales and to add 50 fin whales and 50 humpback whales over the next
two years. Both humpback and fin whales are listed as endangered
species.
The Fisheries Agency of Japan claims, "according to Japanese cultural
values… whales are viewed as a food source." However, an opinion poll
commissioned in 2002 by the influential Japanese Asahi newspaper found
that only four percent of the Japanese population regularly eat whale
meat nine percent rarely eat it; 53 percent haven’t eaten it since
childhood and 33 percent have never eaten it.
“In reality few Japanese people view whale meat as a vital food source
and even fewer actually eat it. It is simply not true that whaling is
important to the Japanese public and the whaling fleet should not leave
for the Antarctic whale sanctuary,” said Mizuki Takana of Greenpeace
Japan.
The FAJ also claims that whales are contributing to the collapse of
fish stocks. "Ninety nine per cent of the catch will be Southern Ocean
minke whales which eat krill and not fish. Only the newly added
endangered Fin and Humpback whales eat fish," said John Frizell, Oceans
campaigner at Greenpeace. "Are we really saying that we cannot spare a
few fish for endangered whales?