Guest guest Posted July 18, 2001 Report Share Posted July 18, 2001 For more: http://www.stopwhalekill.org Pacific Whale Sanctuary Looks Beached (CNN-ASIA) CNN.WORLD-ASIA Pacific Whale Sanctuary Looks Beached July 17, 2001 Posted: 12:41 PM HKT (0441 GMT) By staff and wire reports SYDNEY, Australia -- A proposed South Pacific whale sanctuary appears doomed in the lead-up to a meeting of the International Whaling Commission (IWC). A move by Australia and New Zealand to establish the sanctuary is again expected to fail, having already been blocked by Japan, with support coaxed from six Caribbean countries at last year's IWC meeting in Australia. The International Whaling Commission (IWC) meets in London next week to review submissions for the South Pacific sanctuary and another proposed by Brazil for the South Atlantic. Both plans look likely to sink. " The chances for the sanctuary look very bleak...almost impossible, " said Cassandra Phillips, policy adviser for the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), which will lobby the IWC meeting. Australian Environment Minister Robert Hill is not optimistic given that IWC rules require a three-quarters majority for the sanctuary proposals to pass. At last year's IWC meeting in Adelaide, South Australia, where the South Pacific sanctuary was first proposed, it was defeated with only 18 nations in favor, 11 against and four abstaining. " Under the rules of the IWC it is so easily blocked, and we have no reason for confidence there has been any substantial movement from those who voted against our position -- so it is very difficult, " Hill told Reuters news agency. Sanctuaries deemed 'frivolous' The IWC has approved two whale sanctuaries to protect feeding grounds in the Indian Ocean and the Southern Ocean, which lashes Antarctica. But Japan ignores the sanctuaries, catching 1,000 whales a year in it calls " scientific whaling. " Critics say much of the whale meat ends up on restaurant tables or supermarket shelves. Japan has warned that the continued opposition to commercial whaling by Australia and New Zealand threatens the very existence of the IWC, which was established to regulate whaling. " Australia and New Zealand should leave their frivolous whale sanctuary proposal at home, " Japan's government said recently. Environmentalists fear Japan is getting close to eventually having enough support to overturn a 1986 IWC whaling moratorium. " We are fearful Japan is looking at loading the IWC with tame countries and then could get a majority to change the rules. They are getting fairly close, " said David Butcher, chief executive of WWF in Australia. Butcher said Iceland, Russia and Korea might be waiting in the wings to resume commercial whaling if Japan was able to end the moratorium. Pacific islands shunned WWF and Greenpeace charge Japan with using its large aid budget to coax small countries to vote its way. " We are very pessimistic on the voting, it looks as though the whalers may be able to count on almost half of the 38 or 40 votes this year, which will make it difficult to get resolutions criticizing the whalers adopted, " said Phillips. WWF said new IWC members Panama and Morocco were expected to vote with Japan, along with Peru if it can pay back dues and become eligible to vote. While the island states of the Caribbean helped block the new South Pacific whale sanctuary last year, the islands of the Pacific are not even members of the IWC. Australia has talked with its island neighbors about joining the IWC, but the financial commitment necessary is a burden these economically struggling nations can ill afford. Whale watching boom As the economic benefits of whale watching grow, South Pacific island states are beginning to view the whales as a possible economic lifeline worth protecting. The South Pacific Forum, which represents 16 island states, last year endorsed a proposed whale sanctuary, saying it would not only protect the breeding grounds of nine species but also spawn whale watching industries in the islands. Global whale watching is worth $1.0 billion, attracting nine million people a year in 87 countries and territories, according to an International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) report. Whale watching in Tonga is estimated to contribute $1.0 million a year to the island's economy. " Whales and marine life have become a focal point for tourism in Tonga today. The more whales we have in our region the better the future for our children, " said Tongan lawmaker Samiu Vaipulu. Reuters contributed to this report. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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