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Right now the IWC is meeting in London. Because of Japan's stacking of the

committees, we may see a renewal of commercial whaling, if not this year,

then next year. Thus the importance of reading these posts and acting to

stop Japan and Norway. Visit our site www.stopwhalekill.org for more

information, contacts.

 

Dian

 

*********

 

Japanese Official Defends Whaling

Wed 18 Jul 2001

 

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) - Japan's fisheries chief denounced efforts to curb

the country's whaling industry, calling the species of whale most often

killed by its fishermen the ``cockroach'' of the sea. He defended Japan's

use of foreign aid to influence international whaling policy.

 

Japan kills about 500 whales a year under a scientific whaling program, and

is campaigning for a rollback of a 1986 worldwide ban on commercial whaling.

 

Fisheries agency head Masayuki Komatsu said Japan had to use the ``tools''

of diplomacy and promises of overseas development aid to influence members

of the International Whaling Commission to vote against restrictions on

commercial whaling.

 

``Japan does not have military powers, unlike the U.S. or Australia,'' he

said in an English language interview with Australian Broadcasting

Corporation radio. ``In order to get appreciation of Japan's position, of

course, it is natural we must resort to those two major tools.''

 

``I think there is nothing wrong,'' Komatsu said, adding that the minke

whale, the species most commonly killed by Japanese whalers, was ``a

cockroach in the oceans.''

 

``There are too many,'' he said.

 

Six Caribbean countries voted with Japan last year on nearly every motion at

the International Whaling Commission, including the defeat of a joint

Australian-New Zealand proposal to create a South Pacific whale sanctuary.

 

New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark reacted angrily to Komatsu's

comments, accusing Japan of bribing poorer nations to support its campaign

to overturn the global moratorium on commercial whaling.

 

``This confirmation of Japan's tactics shows the desperate lengths it will

go to in order to maintain whaling,'' Clark said in a statement.

 

Japan has been under suspicion for some time of effectively buying the

support of poorer countries, she said.

 

``Japan must surely be embarrassed by today's revelation from one its own

senior officials,'' Clark added.

 

Clark's government strongly opposes the Japanese scientific whaling program,

and will again pursue a proposal for whale sanctuaries in the South Pacific

and South Atlantic through the IWC. This year's IWC meeting begins in London

on July 23.

 

``We are more determined than ever to protect the great mammals of the ocean

in perpetuity, and today's admission by Japan underlines the urgency of this

task,'' Clark said.

 

Copyright 2001 Associated Press

============================================================

http://www.aftenposten.no/english/local/d222578.htm

Fisheries minister blasts SAS whale ban

 

Otto Gregussen defends Norway's whale hunt.

 

Norway's fisheries minister defended the country's controversial whale hunt

Tuesday and said he was irritated by SAS' decision to refuse transport of

whale exports. He accused SAS of virtual betrayal.

 

 

Otto Gregussen said SAS' unwillingness to carry whale exports has no

practical effect because most of the exports will be transported by ship.

But he claims the airline's position " gives symbolic support to an

international slander campaign against Norway. "

 

He accused SAS of caving in to the international campaign, which has some

activists calling for boycotts of all Norwegian and Japanese products

because of the determination to continue whaling.

 

Gregussen claimed there are between 120,000 and 150,000 minke whales in

Norwegian waters. " We have, in the course of a short summer season, hunted

540 of them, " he said. " It's meaningless to portray that as a threat against

the whale stocks here. "

 

He claimed that on the contrary, Norway's whale stocks are growing.

 

Gregussen noted that Norwegian politicians are in agreement on the whaling

issue, and that policies are based on scientific research and conclusions.

He denied that Norway was defying international accords on whaling.

 

" Yet SAS decides they won't transport whale meat for ethical reasons, "

Gregussen fumed, questioning whether the airline also had similar policies

against transport of weapons.

 

Aftenposten Interactive English Desk

 

=============================================

Japan Uses Means to Press for Whaling

Wed 18 Jul 2001

 

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) - Japan uses overseas aid and diplomatic contacts

to encourage countries to vote against restrictions on commercial whaling,

the Japanese fisheries agency head said Wednesday.

 

Japan kills about 500 whales a year under a scientific whaling program, and

is campaigning for a rollback of a 1986 worldwide ban on commercial whaling.

 

Fisheries agency head Masayuki Komatsu said Japan had to use the ``tools''

of diplomatic communications and promises of overseas development aid to

influence members of the International Whaling Commission.

 

``Japan does not have military powers, unlike the U.S. or Australia,'' he

said in an Australian Broadcasting Corporation radio interview. ``In order

to get appreciation of Japan's position, of course, it is natural we must

resort to those two major tools.''

 

``I think there is nothing wrong,'' Komatsu said, adding that the minke

whale, the species most commonly killed by Japanese whalers, was ``a

cockroach in the oceans.''

 

``There are too many,'' he said.

 

Six Caribbean countries voted with Japan last year on nearly every motion at

the International Whaling Commission, including the defeat of a joint

Australian-New Zealand proposal to create a South Pacific whale sanctuary.

 

New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark reacted angrily to Komatsu's

comments, accusing Japan of bribing poorer nations to support its campaign

to overturn the global moratorium on commercial whaling.

 

``This confirmation of Japan's tactics shows the desperate lengths it will

go to in order to maintain whaling,'' Clark said in a statement.

 

Japan has been under suspicion for some time of effectively buying the

support of poorer countries, she said.

 

``Japan must surely be embarrassed by today's revelation from one its own

senior officials,'' Clark added.

 

Clark's government strongly opposes the Japanese scientific whaling program,

and will again pursue a proposal for whale sanctuaries in the South Pacific

and South Atlantic through the IWC. This year's IWC meeting begins in London

on July 23.

 

``We are more determined than ever to protect the great mammals of the ocean

in perpetuity, and today's admission by Japan underlines the urgency of this

task,'' Clark said.

 

Copyright 2001 Associated Press.

==============================================================

Jul 19, 2001 updated

IWC scientific committee wraps up discussion on minke whales

LONDON, July 16, Kyodo - The Scientific Committee of the International

Whaling Commission (IWC) on Monday wrapped up a two-week meeting to assess

the stock of minke whales in the Antarctic Ocean, an issue that has widened

the rift between whaling nations like Japan and those protesting whale

hunts.

After a one-day break, the IWC will convene four days of panel meetings --

including one to map out management guidelines for commercial whaling --

before convening a four-day annual meeting in London next Monday.

 

The Scientific Committee, where debates were conducted behind closed doors,

is expected to release its findings at the IWC meeting.

 

In 1991, the committee set the population of minke whales in the Antarctic

Ocean at 760,000, giving the Japanese whaling industry scientific grounds to

press for a resumption of commercial whaling.

 

Anti-whaling nations, however, have complained that the figure is too high,

arguing that the estimate was based on insufficient scientific data.

 

The Japanese government argues that even if the stock of minke whales is

revised down to 500,000, that would still be high enough to justify

commercial whaling.

 

The main focus of IWC panel work -- scheduled to run from Wednesday through

Saturday -- will likely be on the drafting of a set of management guidelines

under the so-called Revised Management Scheme to regulate commercial

whaling.

 

Anti-whaling IWC member countries want to give international inspectors on

board whaling ships the authority to crack down on illegal whaling. They

also want legal power to regulate whale meat markets.

 

Japan and Norway, both whaling nations, have rejected the proposals as

beyond ''common sense.''

 

2001 Kyodo News © Established 1945.

=============================================

18/07/2001 09:50

 

Japan admits using money to get whaling votes

The head of Japan's fisheries agency today admitted his country had used

overseas aid grants to bribe some countries to vote against an international

ban on commercial whaling.

 

Japan currently kills whales under a scientific program but wants a return

to open commercial whaling.

 

Fisheries agency head Maseyuku Komatsu said Japan had few tools with which

to influence other countries on the issue.

 

Mr Komatsu admitted Japan bought the votes with promises of overseas

development aid (ODA).

 

" Japan does not have military powers, unlike the US or Australia. You may

dispatch your military power to East Timor, " he said. " Japanese means are

simply diplomatic communication and ODAs.

 

 

==============================================================

Japanese official admits whaling bribery

18/07/01 11:36:39 | AM

 

© ABC 2001

Transcript of Radio program

 

 

The head of Japan's whaling program has admitted, for the first time, that

his country is bribing other countries in an attempt to overturn the global

ban on commercial whaling.

 

Transcript:

 

LINDA MOTTRAM: Japan's poor image on the sensitive issue of whaling has

taken a new battering with the surprising admission from a top official. The

head of Japan's whaling program has admitted, for the first time, that his

country is bribing other countries in an attempt to overturn the global ban

on commercial whaling.

 

Well, the startling admission comes ahead of next weeks key International

Whaling Commission meeting in London. Tokyo correspondent Mark Simkin

reports.

 

MARK SIMKIN: In April in northern Japan, a massive ship returned to port. On

board were the carcasses of 440 whales caught and killed in the Antarctic,

not far from Australia. The world banned commercial whaling in 1986 but

Japan's hunt is not illegal so long as it's for research purposes.

Nevertheless, the Japanese Government wants a return to the good old days

when it could kill as many whales as it wanted. Masayuki Komatsu heads the

international division of Japan's Fisheries Agency.

 

MASAYUKI KOMATSU: I believe that, you know, minke whale is, you know,

cockroach in the ocean.

 

MARK SIMKIN: Why do you call a minke whale a cockroach?

 

MASAYUKI KOMATSU: Well because there are too many and speed of the whale,

you know, swimming so quick.

 

MARK SIMKIN: It's unfortunate that people then eat what is considered to be

a cockroach.

 

MASAYUKI KOMATSU: Yeah but, you know, a sarcastic analisation is, if you

have maybe charming ladies, you aren't worried? If ladies not, you know,

charming, you hate it? Or you're going to treat badly? I don't think that

this is a fair ways.

 

MARK SIMKIN: The body that determines the future of the world's whales is

the International Whaling Commission. At the moment, the majority of it's

members are opposed to commercial whaling. But Japan is determined to change

that, so determined, it's resorted to bribery.

 

At last year's annual IWC meeting in Adelaide, six Caribbean countries with

no apparent interest in whaling, voted with Japan upon virtually every

motion. They even overturned an Australian proposal for a South Pacific

Whale Sanctuary. For the first time Japan's top fisheries official has

admitted that his country bought those votes with overseas development aid

or ODA.

 

MASAYUKI KOMATSU: Japan does not have a military power. Unlike US and

Australia, you may dispatch your, you know, military power to East Timor,

that is not the case of Japan. Japanese, you know, means is simply

diplomatic communication and ODAs. So, in order to get appreciation of

Japan's position, of course you know that is natural that we must do, result

on those two major truths. So, I think there is nothing wrong.

 

MARK SIMKIN: Right now Japan has amassed a blocking vote. But the fear is,

that before long, it will have purchased enough support to overturn the

commercial ban all together.

 

This is Mark Simkin in Tokyo for AM.

 

Transcripts from programs " AM " , " The World Today " , " PM " , the " 7:30 Report "

and " Lateline " are created by an independent transcription service.

==================================================

18/07/2001 09:54

 

Finnair joins opposition to whaling

" Finnair is refraining from the transport of whale meat, blubber or other

whale products on its aircraft. With this announcement, Finnair has joined

the growing number of airlines taking a stand on whale product

transportation, " Finnair said in a statement.

 

" Finnair supports efforts for the conservation of endangered whale species

as stated in international conventions, " it said.

 

Similar pledges were made earlier this month by 21 major airlines which said

they would not carry Norwegian whale meat exports

 

===================================================

DNA Detectives Say Endangered Whale Sold in Japan

 

----------

----

 

Story Filed: Wednesday, July 18, 2001 6:43 AM EST

 

LONDON (Reuters) - DNA detectives discovered meat from endangered whales on

sale in Japanese food markets, the International Fund for Animal Welfare

(IFAW) said on Wednesday.

 

The scientists said they found meat from protected humpback, fin and sei

whales on sale. Their research also revealed horse and dolphin meat is being

passed off as whale meat.

 

The researchers, who have presented their evidence to the International

Whaling Commission, purchased a total of 129 samples from whale markets and

subjected them to DNA analysis.

 

``This new research finally reveals the truth -- that so-called scientific

whaling is providing a cover for the illegal trade in endangered species,''

the IFAW's Japan representative Naoko Funahashi said in a statement released

in London.

 

Japan, where whale meat is a delicacy, is one country allowed under a

15-year-old international moratorium to catch a certain number of whales for

scientific research.

 

Environmentalists argue that carefully controlled whale-watching for

tourists offers a financially viable alternative to hunting, with nine

million whale enthusiasts generating record revenues of $1 billion in 2000.

 

 

 

2001 Reuters Limited.

=======================================================

WINNIPEG, MB, Jul 18, 2001 (Resource News International via COMTEX) --

 

SCIENTISTS STEP UP EFFORTS TO SAVE DYING WHALE

 

A team of marine scientists from Canada and the United States was preparing

Tuesday for what could be a final attempt to disentangle an ailing whale

that was lumbering toward the Bay of Fundy, Halifax.

 

The rare North Atlantic right whale, cinched in a mess of synthetic rope,

was about 120 kilometers south of Yarmouth, NS, yesterday, and moving slowly

toward the bay, said an official with the Department of Fisheries and

Oceans.

 

The condition of the whale, a male known as Number 1102 or Churchill, has

worsened considerably since it was discovered at the beginning of June. Its

skin, normally a glossy black, has turned a cloudy white and pieces of it

are sloughing off, said Teri Frady, spokesperson with the National Marine

Fisheries Service.

 

The whale had been off the coast of Cape Cod for weeks, where American

veterinarians had tried several times to remove the line that's wrapped

around its head.

 

The Canadian Coast Guard and the fisheries department will provide

equipment, expertise and vessels to take the American team out to the whale

if it moves into the bay or along the southeastern coast of Nova Scotia.

 

They managed to remove some of the line that was trailing from one of its

sides, but have been unable to cut free a long piece that's restraining its

mouth and restricting its ability to eat.

 

Scientists are eager to save the whale since it is one of the remaining few

in the world and is known to have fathered at least two calves. (Toronto

Star)

 

=========================================================

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