1
   

Hunters to Go on Offensive at World Whale Talks

 
 
Reply Mon 19 Jul, 2004 12:16 am
Quote:
IWC chairman to seek return to commercial whaling

SORRENTO, Italy (AFP) Jul 18, 2004
The chairman of the International Whaling Commission (IWC) will propose ending an 18-year moratorium on whale hunting at the opening of the body's annual meeting here Monday, according to a confidential document seen by AFP.
Hendrik Fischer, of Denmark, will tell commissioners from some 50 nations that a resumption of commercial whaling is vital to restore the credibility of the dispute-wracked body and its ability to ensure the conservation and management of the world's whale stocks.

The IWC is bitterly divided between countries opposed to a resumption of commercial whaling and those backing it, like Japan, Norway and Iceland.

Conservation bodies like Greenpeace are also fiercely opposed to whaling, which it says is inhumane and unnecessary.

In a confidential document circulated to IWC commissioners, Fischer argues his plan is the best way to balance "safe catch limits" with conservation, a dispute over which has blocked progress on a so-called Revised Management Scheme for more than a decade.

"At present our organisation is not generally seen to be working effectively and indeed the present polarised views and actions, are, I believe, detrimental to conservation," Fischer says in the document.

He says that a phased resumption of whaling could be in place by 2006 at the latest.

"I believe that some sort of phased-in approach to commercial whaling could be useful in building public confidence in the IWC's ability to manage whaling and conserve whale stocks," Fischer says in the document.

"This is not to imply ...that there will be immediate widespread whaling on all species around the world," he insists.

"I suggest that the best approach would be by phasing in the areas in which commercial whaling would be allowed," adding that, for an initial five-year period, whaling would only be tolerated in the national waters of member states.

The moratorium has been in place since 1986, to prevent the extinction of a number of endangered species.

But it has been ignored by Norway, while Japan's and Iceland's whaling fleets have been allowed annual quotas of some species for "scientific" purposes, which opponents say is commercial whaling in disguise.

Japan, which has been accused of peddling foreign aid for votes from some smaller African and Caribbean IWC members, has threatened to form its own breakaway whaling organisation if the moratorium does not fall.

The Japanese delegation described the IWC last week as "totally dysfunctional".

But most member states believe that the international body, bitterly divided between conservationists and hunters, still provides the best forum for managing the world's whale population, particularly species which are under threat from extinction.

Fischer's proposals, if accepted at Sorrento meeting, would likely curb a revolt by Tokyo, which has given the move a cautious welcome.

"It's the first time we've witnessed at the IWC a really concerted effort to move forward. The IWC has never really come close to reaching an agreement," a spokesman for the Japanese delegation told AFP.

A three-quarters majority is required to overturn the moratorium and is unlikely to be achieved at the Sorrento meeting, where delegations appear to be split 50-50.

However, Fischer's document is likely to provide a major boost to Japan's efforts to score a moral victory over opponents they claim are condemning a whaling culture and tradition they are ignorant about.

He says a return to full commercial whaling would have the effect of "ensuring the conservation and management of whale stocks for the future, restoring the credibility of the IWC as an effective organisation and providing an example of how modern natural resource management should be carried out".

Failure to put the plan in place "will jeopardise the future of the IWC and serves neither the interests of whale conservation or management."
Source
  • Topic Stats
  • Top Replies
  • Link to this Topic
Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 424 • Replies: 1
No top replies

 
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Mon 19 Jul, 2004 12:22 am
Quote:
Whales scream silently as a cruel industry goes on
By Jordan Burke
Monday, 19 July 2004

AUSTRALIA's multi- million-dollar whale- watching industry is gearing up for another bumper season, with record numbers of whales heading to Queensland and the official NSW count already exceeding 1000.

Yet this eco-tourism boom, which can be directly attributed to the regeneration of whale numbers since whaling was banned in Australian waters, is not enough to protect these wonders of the deep from ongoing cruelty and suffering at the hands of international whalers.

The organisation that imposed a ban on commercial whaling in 1986, the International Whaling Commission, does not intend to even consider cruelty to whales at its next annual meeting in Italy today. This is a worrying omission, considering that more than 20,000 whales have been killed since the ban came into force and several countries exploit loopholes in IWC legislation to continue slaughtering a variety of species.

A global anti-whaling coalition, led by the World Society for the Protection of Animals, has launched its Whalewatch campaign to make the welfare of whales a major issue for the IWC.

The society and its global partners are concerned that if whale welfare is not on the meeting agenda there is a real risk that the moratorium will be lifted, pro-whaling countries arguing that an increase in the whale population is reason enough to lift it.

This would undoubtedly have immense cruelty implications for whales and could ultimately threaten Australia's thriving whale-watching industry - an industry that last year attracted more than 1.6million tourists.

The coalition is also alarmed at the considerable international whaling activity occurring outside of the IWC, much of it under the guise of so- called scientific research.

Whale meat from these "scientific" operations is ultimately intended for human consumption, but unlike farm animals slaughtered for food whales are not protected by regulations governing the killing of them.

The result is an industry that employs virtually the same killing methods as it did in the 19th century - grenade-tipped harpoons that even the most experienced of gunners find difficult to use to kill a whale instantly .

Too many whales, which have high intelligence and complex social structures, endure up to an hour or more of severe pain before dying.

If this type of extreme suffering and inefficiency was commonplace in abattoirs, the public condemnation of the meat industry would be unanimous and so severe as to force an instant end to such inhumane slaughter and the immediate introduction of strict regulations to ensure a quick, painless and therefore humane kill. Curiously, though, the whaling industry has remained largely unchallenged and unregulated for centuries, and continues to inflict on these unique creatures an overwhelming level of pain.

The Whalewatch campaign faces the challenge of bringing the question of cruelty to the fore while calling for a halt to all commercial and scientific whaling and maintaining the ban on commercial whaling.

At the heart of the campaign is a comprehensive new report, Troubled Waters, which provides a wealth of scientific and practical evidence brought together for the first time to highlight the extent of the cruelty in the killing of whales.

Ironically, the most powerful argument for stopping this unnecessary practice comes from the whaling gunners themselves. Half a century ago, a group of gunners on an Antarctic whaling trip admitted to an onboard physician that if whales could scream the industry would stop, for nobody would be able to stand it.

More than 50 years on, the whales are still silently screaming and it is up to the international community and the IWC to push for the only solution - a permanent end to whaling.
Jordan Burke is a former media adviser and spokesperson for the British RSPCA. He is now a freelance journalist and animal- welfare media consultant.
Source
0 Replies
 
 

Related Topics

 
  1. Forums
  2. » Hunters to Go on Offensive at World Whale Talks
Copyright © 2024 MadLab, LLC :: Terms of Service :: Privacy Policy :: Page generated in 0.04 seconds on 10/02/2024 at 10:22:29