Humpbacks to be spared the harpoon -- for now

Feature story - 21 December, 2007
The Japanese government has confirmed a rumour first reported at the Greenpeace weblog, that they have abandoned plans to kill humpback whales in the Southern Ocean this season.

Humpback whale and calf

That no humpback whales will be hunted down and killed in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary is good news indeed, and a victory for Greenpeace supporters the world over who have joined with us in demanding action from their governments, participated in promoting non-lethal alternatives to whale research through our Great Whale Trail, and questioned the Japanese government directly about plans to expand the whale hunt through the building of a new whaling ship.

(Oh, and all of you who told your friends to vote for Mister Splashy Pants in our whale-naming competition, you did your part too.)

But even better news would be that no fin whales or minke whales are to be slaughtered either. That not a single harpoon will breach the Whale Sanctuary at all is the news that the world is waiting for.

But whaling has not ended. Japan still plans to kill fin and minke whales this year. Saving one species is not enough. We all need to do more NOW to stop the hunt forever.

Scandal

The entire so-called scientific whaling programme is a two decades old scandal, and by backing down today on the humpback hunt, Japan has acknowledged that it fears further scrutiny of a hoax that has nothing to do with science.

Japan's whaling program is in deep trouble.  Japan has backed down in the face of public outrage over killing the favourite whale of whale-watchers.  Japan has also realised that the humpback whalemeat that would result from the hunt was going to be legally challenged under the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species.

Secret plans to build new ship threatened

The Japanese Fisheries Agency was clearly alarmed at the mounting attention being paid to a "research program" which yields no useful science, and which adds to a stockpile of unsold whalemeat which hardly anyone buys.  They are worried about the attention the humpbacks have drawn to their plans to kill 935 minkes and 50 endangered fins.  But most of all, they are worried about attention being drawn to the plans of a few bureaucrats within Japan who are planning a massive expansion of the whale hunt, by constructing a new whaling factory ship at a cost of some US$125 million to US$188 million, at the expense of Japanese taxpayers.

Now is the time to press for an end forever

The future of whaling could well depend upon whether a new factory shipgets built or not.

We believe the Japanese taxpayer has a right to askwhether billions of Yen should be invested in this industry --espectially given that it generates no useful science, adds to amountain of unsold whalemeat, poses a diplomatic liability to Japan,and in the end profits only a very few bureuatcrats.

For nations that support whale conservation, now is the time to press Japan to abandon the whale hunt entirely, and to stop the build of a new Nisshin Maru.  

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Greenpeace is the only organisation which combines global political pressure with domestic pressure in Japan and non-violent action on the high seas to save the whales. Please help us END WHALING FOREVER -- we accept no donations from corporations or governments, relying entirely on people like you.