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From Gray Whales with Winston

http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/Jungle/1953/index.html

 

 

http://atimes.com/japan-econ/CG31Dh02.html

July 31, 2001 atimes.com

 

Japan

 

Japanese blase over 'bribes'

By Edwin Karmiol

 

TOKYO - Accusations that Japan is using its mammoth aid funds to get small

nations to back its position on whaling may be creating ripples overseas,

but here at home the subject has made very little waves. There has been

little comment on this in the local press, and replies from the government

to media inquiries have not come easily.

 

" Very honest but a little stupid " is how an academic here described remarks

made earlier this month by a Japanese official, who said Tokyo uses its

influence with the promise of aid to developing countries to favor

pro-whaling activities.

 

Last week, small nations, including from the Caribbean, voted along with

Japan, Norway, China, Denmark and South Korea to defeat, for the second year

in a row, a proposal to create a whale sanctuary in the South Pacific at the

International Whaling Commission (IWC) meeting week in London.

 

" Japan does not have military power, unlike the United States and Australia.

You may dispatch military power to East Timor, but that is not the case for

Japan. Our means is diplomatic communication and Overseas Development

Assistance, " Fisheries Agency official Maseyuku Komatsu told Australian ABC

television.

 

While the remarks by Komatsu were frank, they were a " mistake " , says

Yoshinori Murai, a professor of foreign studies at Tokyo's Sophia University

who is also involved in ocean resources research. The comments were " very

embarrassing to the international community and for the Japanese

government " , he explains.

 

In response to media inquiries, a Fisheries Agency of Japan official said

all staff in charge of whaling were attending the IWC meeting and there was

no one " with responsibility " who could answer queries about Japan's

position. Reports say the Fisheries Agency has issued an internal memorandum

saying that a check with Komatsu found that " there was no truth " to remarks

attributed to him on record. It also said the ABC report gives the

impression that " a country's policy can be traded for money and insults the

recipients of our aid " .

 

An earlier response by the Japanese Whaling Association to Greenpeace

International's criticism denies that Tokyo gives aid to influence countries

on whaling.

 

" Japan is the largest donor of foreign aid worldwide, and among some 200

recipients of the ODA or Fisheries Development Funds from Japan are some

strong anti-whaling nations in IWC such as India, Brazil Argentina and

Peru. " While some Caribbean nations that support Japan do receive Fisheries

Development Assistance from Tokyo, " the money is not sent to them for

'buying votes', " it added.

 

Clearly, this is a touchy issue for Japan's government, at a time when Tokyo

is trying to be more of a leader in the international community and its

overseas aid program is supposed to be more transparent. But there may be

other reasons for Japan's silence on the matter. Noriko Oyama of Greenpeace

says, " Most Japanese are not interested in whaling issues. They really do

not care about it. Eighty percent of the population considers the price of

whale meat too expensive. "

 

An analyst here watching the whaling controversy called Komatsu's remarks an

indication of " fisheries diplomacy " . He added: " As common sense, no country

gives money for nothing. Here, Japan is asking for some kind of compensation

in return for a favor. "

 

Officials of some governments to whom Japan has dangled the aid carrot in

recent years had different reactions. A Tongan official earlier this year

his government had been approached this way, but said aid and whaling were

two " separate " matters.

 

But others say Japan's approach is mere pragmatism and perhaps no different

from other donors on other issues. Last weekend, the Prime Minister of

Antigua and Barbuda, Lester Bird, told the Caribbean news agency CANA his

government would back whaling due to considerations of Japan's aid.

 

" Quite frankly I make no bones about it ... If we are able to support the

Japanese, and the quid pro quo is that they are going to give us some

assistance, I am not going to be a hypocrite, " he was quoted as saying.

 

Murai says of the quid pro quo formula: " However, it is not a clear bribe

but a promise of aid to a country, and the offer could be very attractive. "

 

It is easy to recognize the power of Japan's official development

assistance, which accounted for some 30 percent of the world's total ODA

last year. For fiscal year 2001, Japan has earmarked US$8.3 billion for

foreign assistance.

 

Murai adds that Japan's government and the whaling industry are very strong

here. Japan believes its official studies that confirm the increase of some

whale populations, which it says would make sustainable use of these

resources possible.

 

Japan, like Norway, says its consumption of whale meat follows tradition.

The Japanese Whaling Association argues that Greenpeace believes " the

killing of any whale is evil " , even if better management of ocean resources

requires a multi-species environment, adding that it does not go after

endangered species.

 

But claims about whale meat, now a luxury food, may apply to a smaller

number of people in Japan, where the older generation remembers how

nutritious whale meat was abundant and inexpensive. Today, Kujiraya is the

only restaurant in Tokyo that exclusively serves whale meat. The owner of

the 51-year-old restaurant says 200 to 300 patrons come daily for whale

steak and whale sashimi dressed with soya and horseradish. He also offers

fried whale.

 

The price varies between 1,300 and 1,600 yen (US$11-$13) per hundred grams.

In other areas, chefs prepare sashimi with the testicles of whales.

 

Every year since 1987, a fleet of Japanese research ships operates in the

waters of the Antarctic and North Pacific and harpoons up to a total of 500

minke whales under the category of scientific research. Opponents claim that

these are actually designed to provide whale meat to the dwindling

specialized restaurants on the archipelago.

 

But the natural course of events may yet determine the degree of demand for

whale meat products in future.

 

In Taiji in Wakayama prefecture in southern Japan - known as the birthplace

of Japan's commercial whaling - only a handful of fishermen today are still

involved in the capture of small whales which are not prohibited by the IWC.

An earlier report by Japan's Kyodo news agency says that in the 1960s, Taiji

whalers caught about 6,000 whales annually in the Antarctic. This provided

200,000 tons of whale meat, enough to feed 10 million Japanese.

 

But now, officials recruiting young people for " scientific whaling " are

finding it hard to find people keen on it. Taiji's younger folk are in no

mood to take up whaling - which they consider a " 3K " occupation, kitanai

(dirty), kitsui (hard) and and kiken (dangerous.) Even Taiji children are

now reluctant to eat whale meat because, the Kyodo report says, they say

" it's a pity to kill whales and dolphins " .

 

(Inter Press Service)

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

http://atimes.com/japan-econ/CG31Dh01.html

July 31, 2001 atimes.com

 

Japan

 

Whales safe for now, but for how long?

By Samanta Sen

 

LONDON - Thousands of the world's whales are still safe after the annual

meeting of the International Whaling Commission (IWC) ended inconclusively

in London on Friday. But environmentalists fear that safety might last only

another year or so.

 

In a year's time, they say, the commission could find itself looking at

increased pressure for the reversal of a current ban on the commercial

hunting of whales.

 

One of the most acrimonious weeks in the days of the whaling commission

ended with the divide over whaling stronger than ever Friday, as Japan and

Norway insisted on continuing to kill whales. The rest of the IWC members,

led by Britain, Australia, New Zealand and the United States continued to

support the moratorium on commercial hunting of whales set by the commission

in 1986.

 

Officially speaking, only about 1,200 minke whales are killed each year,

almost entirely by Norway and Japan. But the week-long conference here was

marked by heated disputes over these numbers. The Japanese said they were

whaling a few hundred out of a trillion, while the New Zealanders said it

could be many more than a few hundred among about 250,000 or so minke

whales.

 

After this year's meeting, the danger to whales will arise next year when

the whaling commission holds its annual meeting in Tokyo, Ben Stewart from

the International Fund For Animal Welfare said in an interview. " Given the

vote-buying policy of Japan they are likely to generate majority support for

a return to commercial whaling, " he said.

 

Many of the poor among the 43 member countries of the commission, including

six small Caribbean states, voted with Japan this week in what Stewart

called " an auction, not a vote " .

 

Japan's tactics stirred up a storm earlier this month, after a Japanese

fisheries agency official virtually admitted to giving aid in exchange for

support for its whaling policies. Masayuki Komatsu told the Australian

Broadcasting Corporation ahead of the meeting that Japan has a right to use

its economic powers to persuade countries from opposing the ban on whaling.

 

Minke whales, he said, had become the " cockroaches of the ocean " and could

be used by whaling nations in a sustainable way. Japanese officials say that

whale meat consumption is part of its tradition and that other countries

should respect this cultural factor.

 

Komatsu said that Japan had to use the " tools of diplomatic communications

and promises of overseas development aid to influence members of the

International Whaling Commission " . Japan, he said, does not have military

powers unlike the United States or Australia. " In order to get appreciation

of Japan's position, of course, it is natural we must resort to those two

major tools, " he said.

 

Japan won the support of six Caribbean countries, the Solomon Islands and

Guinea with such " persuasion " - persuasion that countries like Antigua and

Barbuda conceded and called a pragmatic quid pro quo situation. This year at

least three other countries getting substantial Japanese aid - Peru, Morocco

and Panama - are joining the commission.

 

Japan undertakes annual whale hunts under a clause that permits killing

whales for scientific research. The clause goes on to say that once whales

are killed, their meat must be consumed and not allowed to go to waste.

Japan says it consumes whale meat - an expensive delicacy - only as a

byproduct of research.

 

This position is " brazenly arrogant " , said Stewart. " Japan is working not on

the strength of its argument but on the strength of its currency. "

 

Last week, the commission voted 21-14 for a resolution urging Japan to stop

its scientific kills of Antarctic minkes. It also passed a resolution by

21-15 urging Norway " to halt immediately all whaling activities under its

jurisdiction " . But both countries said they would continue to kill whales on

a " sustainable " basis.

 

Japan and Norway failed to overturn the ban on commercial whaling, but

blocked a proposal led by Brazil, Australia and New Zealand to create

sanctuaries for whales in the Pacific and the Atlantic. The proposal needed

a three-quarters vote to succeed but managed to get only about two-thirds.

Twenty countries voted for the South Pacific sanctuary, 13 voted against and

four abstained. In the South Atlantic vote, 19 countries favored the

sanctuary, 13 were against and five abstained.

 

The week-long conference was a week of repeated battles between the two

camps. The first battleground was Iceland, which lost a bid to be readmitted

into the whaling commission. But Iceland, which quit in 1992, insisted on

joining with a reservation clause that would give it the right to continue

whaling as a commission member. It sought protection of a clause Norway

invokes to continue whaling as a member of the commission. Under this

clause, Norway claims that the ban does not apply because it posted a

reservation when the ban took effect.

 

An Indian delegate said the vote over Iceland was fought furiously. " I had

calls from delegates from Japan and Norway and from almost every country

backing them, " he told IPS. " They wanted us to abstain, but that vote was

won by a single vote, and abstaining would have given the whaling camp a

significant victory. "

 

But Iceland Fisheries Minister Arni Mathiesen said that the refusal of its

application to rejoin the IWC would have no effect on its whaling policy.

The vote of the whaling commission is not legally binding on members or on

non-members. But the commission carries considerable clout as a trade and

environmental body with strong backing from the governments of member

countries.

 

Even with its loopholes, the ban on commercial whaling has meant protection

for many species of whales, supporters of the ban say. " You can bet your

bottom dollar that if it were not for this ban, Japan and Norway would kill

a lot more whales, " said Stewart.

 

The balance at the commission this time was about 50:50. It might not stay

that way after Tokyo.

 

(Inter Press Service)

 

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

http://www.globeandmail.ca/servlet/RTGAMArticleHTMLTemplate/C/20010730/wwwf?

hub=homeBN & tf=tgam/realtime/fullstory.html & cf=tgam/realtime/config-neutral & v

g=BigAdVariableGenerator & slug=wwwf & date=20010730 & archive=RTGAM & site=Front & ad

_page_name=breakingnews

 

POSTED AT 1:04 AM EDT Monday, July 30

 

 

WWF backs limited whaling

 

Reuters News Agency

 

 

Sydney - Conservation group World Wide Fund for Nature said on Monday a

return to limited whaling may be necessary to stop the collapse of the

International Whaling Commission (IWC) and a return to the open slaughter of

whales.

 

World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) said the just completed IWC meeting in

London was a " disaster " with whaling nations again defeating a proposed

South Pacific whale sanctuary and thumbing their noses at a 1986 IWC

commercial whaling moratorium.

 

WWF warned the International Whaling Commission was near collapse as member

whaling nations like Japan and Norway ignore the whaling moratorium and move

to gain control of the IWC, which once regulated commercial whaling but now

acts as a conservation body.

 

" It seems that limited commercial whaling may be the only way to bring the

whaling countries back into a sensible, controlled program of the IWC, " Ray

Nias, WWF deputy chief executive officer, told Australian Broadcasting

Corporation radio. " Otherwise it looks as though they are going to continue

to stack the numbers at the IWC. The anti-whaling nations are having no

impact at all at the moment on commercial whaling. "

 

" Unless the anti-whaling and whaling countries agree on some sort of ...

small commercial whaling, then these whaling countries will simply walk out

or destroy the IWC and we'll be back to uncontrolled, undocumented whaling

on the high seas. "

 

Anti-whaling nations, led by Britain, the United States, Australia and New

Zealand, in London last week questioned the effectiveness of the IWC. But

they said they would continue to support the IWC, fearing uncontrolled

whaling if it collapsed.

 

As a result of the 16-year whaling moratorium, great whales from the

150-tonne Blue Whale to the 15-tonne Minke are no longer in immediate danger

of extinction. But the Blue and its 90-tonne Northern Right cousin are

classified as endangered, while the Bowhead, Southern Right, Sei, Fin and

Humpback whales are considered vulnerable.

 

 

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

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/07/010730080757.htm

Source: Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (http://www.whoi.edu)

 

 

Posted 7/30/2001

 

Study To Assess Risk Factors Of Vessel Collisions With Endangered Northern

Right Whales

 

Scientists and engineers at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)

and their colleagues will use a new digital recording tag to study and

assess the risk factors of vessel collisions with the endangered Northern

right whale. Less than 300 of the whales remain.

Senior Scientist Peter Tyack of the Institution's Biology Department, who is

heading the study with colleagues at the New England Aquarium, says the

primary human-induced causes for right whale deaths are vessel collisions,

which account for 35 percent of the deaths, and entanglement in fishing

gear, which accounts for 5 percent of right whale deaths. Scientists are

currently trying to save a right whale off the Massachusetts coast entangled

in a fishing line.

 

" Right whales are so buoyant, they float to the surface, " Tyack says. " If

this reduces their ability to maneuver, it may pose a risk of collision with

ships. The whales can hear and localize natural sounds very well, but they

have not been observed to respond to oncoming vessels. "

 

The study is supported by a grant from the Mitsubishi Corporation and the

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's right whale research

program through the National Marine Fisheries Service at NOAA. Collaborators

include the International Fund for Animal Welfare and the New England

Aquarium.

 

" We need to address questions like what age and sex classes, behavioral

contexts or habitats pose the greatest risk, " Tyack adds. " What vessel

characteristics, such as speed, maneuvering, and acoustic signature, pose

the greatest risk? The tag will enable us to learn a lot more about how the

whales respond to vessels as they get closer and may eventually help us

develop an acoustic alerting system. "

 

The new study will focus on the behavioral perspective, using the digital

acoustic recording tag to measure sound stimuli with vocal, behavioral and

physiological responses. The researchers will also follow whale responses to

uncontrolled vessel approaches, playbacks of natural sound, and controlled

exposure to vessel noise during vessel approach. They will also assess the

distribution and abundance of right whales in the western North Atlantic and

collect photographs of individual whales, which can be identified by natural

markings called callosities. These data will be integrated into a database

to update information on population status, reproduction, mortality,

human-caused scarring, and other factors.

 

Tyack and his colleagues note that the Northern Atlantic right whale is an

endangered population, with less than 300 individuals remaining. Extinction

is likely in 100 years unless reproduction increases or mortality decreases.

The population is only growing at a rate of 1-2 percent, while the South

Atlantic right whale population is growing at a rate of seven percent.

 

" Our ignorance of the reproductive behavior and the mating system of right

whales is so profound that we do not even know the season and location where

mating takes place, " Tyack notes. " This hinders our ability to determine the

effects of disturbances like vessels and to minimize them. We hope this

study will help provide data critical to understanding reproduction in ways

that may point to how we can enhance the recovery of this most endangered of

baleen whales. "

 

Tokyo-based Mitsubishi Corporation is a trading and investment company

engaged in a broad range of businesses, including information technology and

electronics, energy, metals, machinery, chemicals and Living Essentials. As

one of the world's most diverse business enterprises, Mitsubishi

Corporation, works closely with its global clientele to develop new

businesses through project coordination, sourcing of raw materials, capital

investments, and global marketing and distribution.

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

http://www.whaling.com/?action=display & article=8506040 & template=whaling/inde

x.txt & index=recent

Aussie Police Blow Up Dead Whale

Tue 31 Jul 2001

 

ADELAIDE, Australia (AP) - Explosive experts gave sharks and other

scavengers a helping hand by blowing up the carcass of a whale to speed up

disposal of the body.

 

Police detonated three small charges in the carcass of a Southern Right

whale because of concerns it was an environmental hazard. The explosion late

Monday left a large tear in the carcass which will make it easier for sharks

to rip up and eat, officials said Tuesday.

 

``It will give marine scavengers a better chance of doing what they do best,

which is to clean up dead and decaying material in the ocean,'' government

spokesman Arndrae Luks said.

 

The carcass, which has been off South Australia state's coast for about two

weeks, had become a tourist attraction, with people hiring boats to watch

sharks feed on it. Tourism authorities said some sightseers clambered on the

whale and patted great white sharks eating the carcass.

 

The whale was believed to have died of natural causes

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

31/07/2001 15:32

 

USA - Whale fatally struck by vessel

A dead whale found off Staten Island had suffered a fatal skull fracture

after it was struck by a large ship, authorities said yesterday. It was the

eighth time a whale had been killed by a vessel in New York-New Jersey

waters during the past year.

 

The Riverhead Foundation, which runs the local stranding program, said that

it normally only deals with one whale death each year.

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

www.whaleresearch.com

 

A few years ago, the film " Free Willy " introduced many to the waters around

the beautiful San Juan Islands. For 26 years, the Centre for Whale Research

on San Juan Island has been documenting the pods of killer whales that

frequent the inland waters of Washington and southern British Columbia,

maintaining a photographic catalogue of every individual as well as

recording the social structure. Among their discoveries: Matriarchs, some

more than 80 years old, continue to dominate the pods. More distressing:

Orca numbers are declining, reflecting a deteriorating marine environment.

The centre shares its research at its site, where you can do a little whale

watching with the roving Orca Cam. If the waters are quiet, you can always

take in an orca video.

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

BRAZIL TO RENEW PUSH FOR SOUTHERN ATLANTIC WHALE SANCTUARY

 

----------

----

 

Story Filed: Tuesday, July 31, 2001 8:10 AM EST

 

Rio de Janeiro, Jul 31, 2001 (EFE via COMTEX) -- Brazil will push for the

creation of a whale sanctuary in the southern Atlantic Ocean, although the

International Whaling Commission (IWC) rejected the proposal last week, the

environment ministry said.

 

Brazil plans to bring up the proposal at next year's IWC meeting in Japan,

Environment Ministry official Antonio de Mello said Monday.

 

" There's a good chance, not just because we have time to negotiate, but

rather because that's the year of the Rio-plus-10 (summit) and attention

will be focused on environmental issues, " he said.

 

At the recently concluded IWC meeting in London, pro-whaling nations Japan

and Norway, as well as several developing nations, rejected the creation of

whale sanctuaries in the south Pacific Ocean and off the Brazilian coast.

 

" Brazil had just two months to work together with the other nations on the

committee, " De Mello said, explaining the failed vote.

 

Argentina, Australia, Britain, Italy, New Zealand and the United States

backed Brazil's proposal.

 

Australia's proposal to create a whale sanctuary in the south Pacific Ocean

also failed.

 

Despite a 15-year moratorium on whale hunting, Japan kills some 500 whales

annually as part of an IWC-authorized scientific program.

 

The whale meat taken by Japanese scientists is sold commercially and

regularly ends up on dinner tables. EFE

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

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