Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Whales in danger

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

You may have seen some of these posts before. However, I'm sending them as

a digest as the IWC is meeting this week, a return to global commercial

whaling is in the works, led by Japan and Norway, and this series of posts

is important to fully understanding the threats to the great whales. Please

bear with me on this. Please see www.stopwhalekill for more information on

this and in particular the reactivated gray whale hunt in Washington State.

 

Dian

 

 

There are 9 messages in this issue.

 

Topics in this digest:

 

1. IWC scientific committee wraps up discussion on minke whales

" WID News " <gclarke

2. Pacific Whale Sanctuary Looks Beached

" WID News " <gclarke

3. Japan admits trading Whale Votes

" WID News " <gclarke

4. DNA Detectives Say Endangered Whale Sold in Japan

" WID News " <gclarke

5. Japanese Official Defends Whaling

" WID News " <gclarke

6. Japan Denies Remarks on Whaling 'Vote-Buying'

" WID News " <gclarke

7. Nordic Airlines join Whale Blubber Ban

" WID News " <gclarke

8. Blue Murder

" WID News " <gclarke

9. Fishermen urged to accept Whale Protection Reforms

" WID News " <gclarke

 

 

______________________

______________________

 

Message: 1

Thu, 19 Jul 2001 01:09:44 -0000

" WID News " <gclarke

IWC scientific committee wraps up discussion on minke whales

 

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.

 

 

 

 

______________________

______________________

 

Message: 2

Thu, 19 Jul 2001 01:21:00 -0000

" WID News " <gclarke

Pacific Whale Sanctuary Looks Beached

 

Pacific Whale Sanctuary Looks Beached

 

SYDNEY, Australia, 17 July, 2001 - 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.

 

 

 

______________________

______________________

 

Message: 3

Thu, 19 Jul 2001 01:37:56 -0000

" WID News " <gclarke

Japan admits trading Whale Votes

 

Japan admits trading Whale Votes

 

ASIA-Pacific, 18 July, 2001 - Japan has acknowledged publicly that it

uses overseas aid to secure support for its campaign to have the

international ban on whaling lifted.

 

(Greenpeace protesters attack a Japanese whaling ship. Photo in

Files: 1444818_minke.jpg)

 

Fisheries ministry head Maseyuku Komatsu said Japan needed to use

diplomacy and overseas aid because it lacked other ways, such as

military might, to influence other countries.

 

He told Australian television he saw nothing wrong in doing so.

 

(Minke whales are caught for " research " . Photo in Files:

1444818_research150.jpg)

 

Correspondents say a number of South Pacific and Caribbean countries

are thought to have accepted aid in return for backing Japan's

efforts to get commercial whaling restarted.

 

Six Caribbean countries voted with Japan last year on virtually every

motion at the International Whaling Commission (IWC) meeting in

Adelaide, including rejecting an Australian move to create a whale

sanctuary in the South Pacific.

 

Mr Komatsu said: " Japan does not have military powers, unlike the US

or Australia. You may dispatch your military power to East Timor.

 

" Japanese means are simply diplomatic communication and overseas

development aid (ODAs).

 

" So, in order to get appreciation of Japan's position, of course,

that is natural we must resort to those two major tools. I think

there is nothing wrong. "

 

Later, an official from the fisheries ministry in Toyko denied Japan

bought support for its position.

 

The official said Japan gave aid to 150 countries and some of the

biggest recipients, including India and Argentina, were strongly

opposed to whaling.

 

Minke 'too numerous'

 

Mr Komatsu referred to minke whales, which Japan is allowed to catch

under a scientific research programme, as " cockroaches of the

oceans " .

 

(Whales attract tourists to Dominica. Photo in Files:

1429955_whale.jpg)

 

Asked what he meant, he said they were too numerous and quick.

 

New Zealand's Prime Minister Helen Clark said: " Japan must surely be

embarrassed by the revelation from one of its own senior officials.

 

" When put alongside Japan's long-standing but spurious assertions

that it is taking large numbers of whales for purely scientific and

research purposes, this confirmation of Japan's tactics shows the

desperate lengths it will go to maintain whaling.

 

" If Japan is indeed indulging in the sort of behaviour alluded to by

Mr Komatsu, it can only underline the bankruptcy of its stance on

whaling. "

 

'Extortion'

 

Dominica is one of the Caribbean countries that faces accusations

that it is sacrificing its reputation as a guardian of wildlife in

return for Japanese cash.

 

Dominica's Environment Minister, Atherton Martin, resigned last year

in protest against what he saw as proof that his country had been

bribed by Japan to support it in an IWC meeting.

 

He told the BBC at the time: " They announced that if they couldn't

get Dominica to come along with them, they would have to place

Dominican projects under review.

 

" If that is not an extortion by the Japanese Government, I don't know

what is.

 

" They are saying, 'You either go with us or we pull the aid.' "

 

The IWC is about to meet again in London, UK.

 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/asia-

pacific/newsid_1444000/1444818.stm

 

Copyright BBC.

 

 

 

______________________

______________________

 

Message: 4

Thu, 19 Jul 2001 01:43:27 -0000

" WID News " <gclarke

DNA Detectives Say Endangered Whale Sold in Japan

 

DNA Detectives Say Endangered Whale Sold in Japan

 

LONDON, 18 July, 2001 (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 (news - web sites), 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.

 

http://dailynews./h/nm/20010718/sc/environment_whales_dc_2.ht

ml

 

2001 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

______________________

______________________

 

Message: 5

Thu, 19 Jul 2001 01:50:35 -0000

" WID News " <gclarke

Japanese Official Defends Whaling

 

Japanese Official Defends Whaling

 

CANBERRA, Australia, 18 July, 2001 (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

 

 

 

______________________

______________________

 

Message: 6

Thu, 19 Jul 2001 02:54:57 -0000

" WID News " <gclarke

Japan Denies Remarks on Whaling 'Vote-Buying'

 

Japan Denies Remarks on Whaling 'Vote-Buying'

 

By Teruaki Ueno

 

TOKYO, 18 July, 2001 (Reuters) - Japan, the world's biggest consumer

of whale meat, denied on Thursday that a senior fisheries official

had said Tokyo handed out aid money to win backing for its campaign

to lift an international ban on whaling.

 

An internal Japanese Fisheries Agency document obtained by Reuters

said agency official Masayuki Komatsu had not said in an interview

with Australian Broadcasting Corp that Japan used the inducement of

development aid to win support from poorer nations.

 

Komatsu's comments were expected to draw an angry response from

countries opposed to whaling at the annual general meeting of the

International Whaling Commission (news - web sites) in London next

week.

 

The Fisheries Agency had checked with Komatsu on whether he had

actually made the remarks, the document said.

 

``After checking with Komatsu, we found that there was no truth to

such remarks,'' it said.

 

``We understand that he said something about aid in general and this

was designed to raise international confidence in Japan,'' it said.

 

Komatsu told ABC that he saw ``nothing wrong'' in using aid as an

inducement to secure backing and that it was a major tool in Japan's

campaign.

 

``Japan does not have military power, unlike the United States and

Australia,'' Komatsu said.

 

``Japanese means are simply diplomatic communication and overseas

development aid. So in order to get appreciation of Japan's position,

that is natural we must resort to those two major tools.''

 

Komatsu said several countries had accepted aid in return for backing

Japan's efforts to get commercial whaling restarted.

 

JAPAN FIGHTS BACK

 

The Japanese Fisheries Agency said, however, that Tokyo had extended

economic aid to more than 150 countries, including anti-whaling

nations such as India and Brazil.

 

``The fact that the recipients of Japanese aid include those

countries which stand against whaling clearly shows that the aid from

our country does not influence their policies,'' the internal

document said.

 

``The report makes it sound as if a country's policy can be traded

for money and insults the recipients of our aid,'' it said. ``This is

truly regrettable.''

 

Japan, where whale meat is a delicacy, is allowed under a 15-year-old

international moratorium on commercial whaling to catch a certain

number of whales for scientific research.

 

Environmental groups have argued that some of the whale meat ends up

being used by Japan's restaurant industry.

 

Six Caribbean countries helped Japan to defeat a joint Australian-New

Zealand proposal for a South Pacific whale sanctuary at last year's

IWC AGM.

 

The commission will vote on the proposal again this year.

 

http://dailynews./h/nm/20010718/sc/environment_japan_whaling_

dc_1.html

 

2001 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

______________________

______________________

 

Message: 7

Thu, 19 Jul 2001 03:19:50 -0000

" WID News " <gclarke

Nordic Airlines join Whale Blubber Ban

 

Nordic airlines join whale blubber ban

 

OSLO, Norway, 17 July, 2001 (Reuters) -- Scandinavian Airlines

Systems and Finnair joined a growing number of carriers Tuesday which

refuse to carry Norwegian whale meat exports on their aircraft.

 

" We've had an internal discussion on this issue, and we came to a

solution that we would not do this, " Trine Lovberg, a spokeswoman at

SAS, told Reuters.

 

" 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,

according to environmental group Greenpeace.

 

" Today we do not have any aircraft which is only used for this kind

of cargo, but the (Norwegian) government and also Greenpeace had

asked for an opinion on this issue, " Lovberg said.

 

Norway in April made a unilateral decision to resume exports of whale

products to Japan, and pressed to have a ban on Minke whale hunting

overturned, claiming there are enough Minke whale for commercial

hunting.

 

In Japan, the outer fat of the Minke is considered a delicacy.

Norwegians also eat whale meat but do not like the blubber.

 

Finnair flies to Oslo, Bergen and Lakselv in Norway. In Japan,

Finnair flies to Tokyo twice a week.

 

Norway resumed commercial whale hunting in 1993 despite a global

moratorium by the International Whaling Commission and protests from

environmental groups including Greenpeace.

 

http://www.cnn.com/2001/TRAVEL/NEWS/07/17/airlines.norway.whale.reut/i

ndex.html

 

Copyright 2001 Reuters. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

______________________

______________________

 

Message: 8

Thu, 19 Jul 2001 03:36:21 -0000

" WID News " <gclarke

Blue Murder

 

BLUE MURDER

 

18 July, 2001 - The Mirror

 

Only 400 giant whales left as warming wipes out food

 

THE magnificent blue whale - biggest creature on the planet - is

facing extinction as its population plummets to as low as 400.

 

Global warming is wiping out its main food source after an onslaught

by hunters in the last 100 years.

 

Numbers have fallen from about 250,000 a century ago to fewer than

1,000 and possibly just 400, the World Wide Fund for Nature warned

yesterday. It wants urgent action from a climate-change conference

now being held in Germany and a London meeting of whaling chiefs next

week.

 

WWF whale specialist Stuart Chapman said: " If anything should get

politicians to sit up and take notice it is the loss of this

creature.

 

" We don't need the movies to go back to the scale of the pre-historic

age - it is there with the blue whale, three times bigger than the

biggest dinosaur, the brontosaurus. "

 

It weighs up to 160 tons and is 100ft long. Even at birth it is

bigger than any land creature.

 

Now the blue whale's main food - krill plankton - is scarce because

of the melting polar ice cap.

 

Minute marine algae from the sea ice were fed on by krill, which are

also being increasingly used as fish bait.

 

It could be the final blow for the blue whale after the slaughter of

tens of thousands during the 20th century.

 

Documents found after the fall of the Soviet bloc showed the Russian

Navy hunted them until 1980, 15 years after a worldwide ban was put

in place.

 

http://www.ic24.net/mgn/THE_MIRROR/NEWS/P17S1.html

 

© MGN, Ltd, 1997, 2001

 

 

 

______________________

______________________

 

Message: 9

Thu, 19 Jul 2001 03:56:39 -0000

" WID News " <gclarke

Fishermen urged to accept Whale Protection Reforms

 

Fishermen urged to accept Whale Protection Reforms

 

ADELAIDE, 18 July, 2001 - A whale protection group says tougher

fishing restrictions in the Great Australian Bight should not damage

the fishing industry and could actually help honest operators.

 

The Federal Government is considering a range of reforms to

strengthen whale protection in the wake of the death of a whale which

became entangled in a fishing net.

 

Margi Prideaux from the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society says

tougher surveillance is one example of what is needed, but but such

reforms should not be feared by the industry.

 

" It's something that should be providing extra security for the

fishing industry that's doing the right thing, while frightening

those that might not be, " she said.

 

" I don't actually see us being poles apart. I think that we should

all be in the same camp on this one. "

 

http://www.abc.net.au/news/regionals/port/regport-18jul2001-4.htm

 

© 2001 Australian Broadcasting Corporation

 

 

 

______________________

______________________

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...