Whaling
Commission Tables Decision on Lifting Commercial Whaling
Moratorium
by Laura Allen, Executive Director of Animal
Law Coalition
The International Whaling Commission (IWC), made up of 88 member nations, held its annual meeting in June in Morocco and was expected to decide whether to suspend for at least 10 years, the 24 year old moratorium on commercial whaling originally championed by Pres. Ronald Reagan.
Instead, the
proposal to lift the moratorium was tabled for another year.
Some whales were nearly extinct when the ban on commercial
whaling went into effect in 1986.
The
moratorium has exceptions or loopholes, however, under which
whales can be captured and slaughtered for scientific
research and aboriginal subsistence. Japan, for example, has
continued whaling under permits granted for scientific
research but makes no secret that the whales are captured
and processed on the ships and the meat is then sold.
In fact, prior to the start of the meeting in Morocco an undercover investigation revealed Japan had bribed officials in six countries to support its efforts to lift the moratorium on commercial whaling. The bribes included cash, free trips, and prostitutes.
Officials from the governments of St Kitts and Nevis, the Marshall Islands, Kiribati, Grenada, Republic of Guinea and Ivory Coast were all willing to sell their votes on the International Whaling Commission in return for aid packages offered by undercover investigators. These officials confirmed Japan had offered bribes for their votes as well. Norway and Iceland have also hunted whales commercially under objections or reservations filed to the moratorium.
Other countries including the U.S. have relied on the aboriginal-subsistence exception to hunt whales.
The IWC tracks to the extent possible the numbers of whales caught. For numbers of those taken under objections or reservations filed to the moratorium, visit this site. Numbers of whales captured under scientific permits can be found here. Numbers of whales taken for aboriginal subsistence are found here.
Under a proposal championed by the Obama administration, Japan and other countries which hunt whales now, could resume commercial whaling instead of pretending they are capturing whales for "scientific research" purposes, but they would have catch limits that proponents say would mean they would kill 3,200 fewer whales each year than they do now. Countries that do not hunt now could not start or resume whaling.
That's the theory.
As with any international law, there is no real enforcement
mechanism, no reason to think Japan, Norway and Iceland will
not simply continue their slaughter of whales in the same or
even higher numbers.
At least with a ban, it's fairly easy to detect a violation. It's not easy at all and may be impossible to know if they have killed more than their catch limit. Also, it was disconcerting that whaling would have been allowed off the coast of Antarctica where the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary is located.
Despite the prohibition on extending commercial whaling to other countries not currently involved, lifting the moratorium may well have encouraged others to decide to resume commercial whaling.
A sticking point during the IWC meeting was insistence that the proposal to lift the moratorium include a provision phasing in zero catch limits, meaning phasing out commercial whaling altogether.
It was decided in a decision supported by the United States government to add humpback whales to the list of whales that can be hunted for subsistence.
The National Resources Defense Council estimates that even with the continuing slaughter by these countries, the number of whales killed annually for commercial use is down from a high before the ban of 38,000 - 60,000 to 1,240 - 1,700. A lot of lives saved.
Big Blend Radio - Laura Allen was a featured guest on The Nature Connection radio show on July 23, 2010. To listen to her interview, please click here.
WHAT YOU CAN DO
Contact President Obama
and urge him to support continuation of the moratorium on
commercial whaling and focus on enforcement measures
including by eliminating bogus "scientific research" permits
that have enabled some countries to continue commercial
whaling. Let's not turn the clock back in our efforts to
save whales from commercial exploitation and risk more
cruelty and brutal slaughter of these wondrous animals.
Learn more at
http://www.animallawcoalition.com/wildlife/article/1360
Laura
Allen, Esq. "Attorney for Animals"
is the founder and Executive Director of Animal Law
Coalition, which advocates for the rights of animals to live
and live free of cruelty and neglect. Laura is a trial
attorney with more than 20 years of experience trying cases
and arguing appeals in the state and federal courts in
Washington, Illinois, Missouri and Arizona. She is a member
of the bar of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Learn more at
www.AnimalLawCoalition.com














