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Compromise on whale hunting still has not surfaced

Tuesday, June 24th 2008 - 21:00 UTC
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A divided International Whaling Commission opened its annual conference in Chile on Monday with hope for a compromise on whale hunting, which continues around the world, spearheaded by Japan, despite a 22-year commercial ban.

Chile took the occasion to declare a permanent ban on whaling in its waters. Speaking at a former whale processing plant that Chile closed in 1967, President Michelle Bachelet also sent a bill to Congress proposing a whale sanctuary along Chile's coastline and declared the whale a national monument. "We have chosen this place, the Quintay whale plant, to highlight the Chile and the world of the past, in which there was no awareness of social and environmental consequences," Bachelet said. "Chile... wants to give the world a clear sign of its will to protect whales in its waters," she added. "This initiative is a pledge to the world of the future". Chile's whaling moratorium had been set to expire in 2025. In Santiago, the annual whaling commission meeting began with nations from the Americas to Europe voicing concern about rising catches of minke whales in the north Pacific, namely in Japanese and Korean waters. Outside the venue, protesters flanked by a giant blue inflatable whale chanted "Murderers, it's your fault," and held aloft banners emblazoned with "Stop the slaughter" and "No blood for tradition". Police detained 15 protesters. "The species is going to be extinct, because they are catching a lot of whales," said 14-year-old schoolboy Martín López, holding a Greenpeace leaflet. "We are here to say we are against whaling". "What Japan is doing is bad". Japan says it is misunderstood, denies the 1,000 whales it hunts each year for what it calls "scientific purposes" despite a 1986 moratorium are making it to the dinner table, and says it is also in favor of conservation. But it also sees whaling as a cultural tradition of its coastal communities and believes in sustainable commercialization of the world's biggest mammals. Japanese supermarkets and restaurants offer whale meat, though demand for the delicacy is declining. Japan has presented the IWC with a resolution to legalize coastal whaling. It is the same resolution that anti-whaling countries blocked a year ago, leading to threats from Japan that it would abandon the 62-year-old IWC.

Categories: Fisheries, International.

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