BlueViews - The
BlueVoice Blog
Introduction
August 26,
2007 - Horror and Hope in the World of Whales
By Hardy Jones
Though the BlueViews Blog will more often than not concern
our work in the field I want to give a picture of some of
what we do on a daily basis – the issues that cross
my desk, the actions we take on involving dolphins and other
marine mammals and sometimes observations about the state
of the planet in general.
WHALE WATCHERS SEE BEAKED WHALE HARPOONED
First thing this morning I received a report that whale watchers
in Japan spotted a Baird’s Beaked Whale off the Northern
Island of Hokkaido. To their horror they saw that the whale
had been harpooned by a catcher boat. People voiced their
pity for the whale. Japan is still hunting whales despite
enormous international condemnation but small whale watching
companies are trying to turn whales into money in a non-lethal
way. BlueVoice.org - http://bluevoice.org/ shows the work
we are doing to stop Japan’s horrific plan to hunt
humpback whales in the Antarctic this November.
PETITION FRENCH POLYNESIA TO HOLD OFF BLASTING UNTIL HUMPBACK
MOTHERS AND CALVES LEAVE BREEDING GROUNDS. We received word
from an old friend, Pascal Rohde, in Tahiti, that the local
government plans to blast a larger hole in the reef opening
into the harbor at Tahiti. This time of year the waters around
Tahiti are home to pregnant females and their new born calves.
We sent off an email on behalf of BlueVoice’s membership.
You can add your own by emailing: Attention Mme la Ministre
of Environment and Tourism Maina Sage at email secretariat@tourisme.min.gov
respectfully asking them to put off the dynamiting until
November when the humpbacks will have left for the Antarctic.
EXCELLENT NEWS – Iceland has announced it will not
issue new whale – hunting quotas until market demand
for the meat increases. Japan has not issued Iceland an export
agreement so a huge market for Icelandic whale meat has evaporated.
As you can see, Japan is the lynchpin that propagates whaling
far beyond its own shores.
CAMPAIGNS IN PLANNING
In late October or early November we will again send a team
to Futo and Taiji, Japan to attempt to stop the slaughter
and capture of dolphins that takes place there. We have
test results showing extremely high levels of mercury in
dolphin meat but this year we will test the fish caught
at Taiji and Futo to determine mercury levels. We expect
them to be high and publication of these figures at the
time of the worldwide concern for food safety will jolt
the villages where dolphins are hunted. Exposing the toxic
levels of their fish products will threaten the economy
of these villages and hopefully bring additional pressure
to end the barbaric practice of hunting dolphins. We will
be webcasting live from the scene.
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