TOKYO, Nov. 19, 2007

Australia, New Zealand Protest Whale Hunt

Nations Appeal To Japan To Stop Fleet Sailing To Kill Humpbacks, Other Whales

    • A 2005 photo of a humpback whale breaching off the U.S. coast. A Japanese whaling fleet plans to kill 50 humpbacks despite an international moratorium.

      A 2005 photo of a humpback whale breaching off the U.S. coast. A Japanese whaling fleet plans to kill 50 humpbacks despite an international moratorium.  (AP)

    • Japanese whaling ship

      Japanese whaling ship "Nisshin Maru" leaves the port of Shimonoseki, southwestern Japan, in this Nov. 17, 2000 file photo. Four decades ago, the world banned the slaughter of humpback whales after rampant hunting drove the gentle giants to near extinction.  (AP Photo/Itsuo Inouye)

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(AP)  Australia and New Zealand appealed to Japan Monday to halt a whaling fleet headed for the Antarctic to hunt humpback whales, and Japanese officials denied activists' claim that the ships had turned off their radio locators to avoid detection.

The fleet left the port of Shimonoseki in southern Japan on Sunday.

The whalers plan to kill up to 50 humpback whales in what is believed to be the first large-scale hunt for the once-nearly-extinct species since a 1963 moratorium in the Southern Pacific put them under international protection.

The mission also aims to kill as many as 935 minke whales and up to 50 fin whales in what Japan's Fisheries Agency says is its largest-ever scientific whale hunt. The expedition lasts through April.

The environmentalist group Greenpeace said its ship, the Esperanza, was searching for the fleet south of Japanese territorial waters and would shadow the ships to the Southern Pacific.

"It's a large ocean, but we're going to track them down," expedition member Dave Walsh told The Associated Press by telephone.

Greenpeace claimed the fleet had turned off radio transponders that signal its location. Hideki Moronuki, head of the whaling section at Japan's Fisheries Agency, denied that.

Anti-whaling nations have widely criticized the hunt.

New Zealand's Prime Minister Helen Clark said the fleet should have never sailed.

"It would just be better if the Japanese stayed home and didn't come down under the guise, the deception, the claim that it is scientific whaling when they want to take a thousand whales," she told New Zealand's TV One.

Quote

It would just be better if the Japanese stayed home and didn't come down under the guise, the deception, the claim that it is scientific whaling when they want to take a thousand whales.

New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark
The Australian government was "deeply disappointed" by the fleet's departure, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer and Environment Minister Malcolm Turnbull said in a statement. "The government again appeals to Japan to reconsider its position on this inhumane practice."

At a farewell ceremony for the expedition, the head of the mission said Japan should not give in to the demands of whaling opponents and criticized environmental groups' tactics.

"They're violent environmental terrorists," Hajime Ishikawa said to a crowd on the dock. "Their violence is unforgivable. ... We must fight against their hypocrisy and lies."

The conservation group Sea Shepherd harried Japan's fleet in the last Antarctic hunt in February. Japan's government released video of protesters launching smoke canisters from a Sea Shepherd ship and dropping ropes and nets to entangle the Japanese vessels' propellers.

The hunt ended early after a fire broke out aboard the mother ship, killing one crew member and forcing the fleet back to port. It was not clear what caused the blaze.

Fisheries Agency officials refused to say whether any special safety precautions were being taken for the current hunt.

Japan says that it needs to kill whales to conduct research on their reproductive and feeding patterns, and that the number it kills is far too small to endanger their overall populations. The International Whaling Commission allows scientific whale hunts, but critics say Japan uses science as a cover for commercial whaling.

An IWC moratorium on commercial whaling took effect in 1986. Japan has killed almost 10,500 mostly minke and Brydes whales under research permits since then.

The head of Japan's Fisheries Agency, Shuji Yamada, said Tokyo's scientific research would help prove that sustainable whaling is possible.

The American Cetacean Society estimates the humpback population has recovered to about 30,000 to 40,000, but the World Conservation Union lists the species as "vulnerable."

© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by numazu November 20, 2007 5:32 PM EST
sun247 I don''t see what country I''m from has to do with anything but if you must know I''m from the US. This article is not just about hunting Humpback whales and no comment left is about hunting Humpback whales till now. So are you saying its ok to hunt whales as long as its not Humpbacks? Or just turn a blind eye when European countries like Norway hunt whales. BTW St. Vincent and the Grenadines hunt Humpback whales!
Reply to this comment
by numazu November 20, 2007 1:45 PM EST
If funny how everyone jumps on Japan for hunting whale and seems to forget that Norway hunts the most whales in the world. Japan is far from the only country that hunts whales. To the ones that say boycott, embargo and sink the ships here are some other countries that hunt whale. Canada, Grenada, Dominica, Saint Lucia, Faroe Islands, Greenland, Iceland, Indonesia, Russia and yes the USA. So before you start attacking Japan, if your from a country that hunts whales you need to attack yourself first.
Reply to this comment
by Syndicate November 19, 2007 9:20 PM EST
They should use their navy and sink the whaling vessels. If Japan protest to much tell them its a new sport. We hunt whaling ships just like you hunt whales.
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by Ed0719 November 19, 2007 8:26 PM EST
I hope this time Sea Shepherd does some serious damage to these barbarians. It is the Japanese that are terrorists in this scenario, and they should face any and all consequences, including being sunk. If it takes extreme violence to end their tyranny on the sea, so be it. They deserve anything that happens to them.
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by afmca November 19, 2007 6:28 PM EST
There should be a total boycott of Japanese imports and American made Japanese products. Once their big corporations start to feel the economic pinch - they will put an end to this totally unnecessary, barbaric whale hunt. There is nothing economically, culturally, or scientifically that can be said to make this hunt justified.
Reply to this comment
by bwessels November 19, 2007 5:16 PM EST
We need to study Japanese culture. To do this, it will be necessary to kill 1035 Japanese citizens, including up to 50 whale meat connoisseurs.

The IWC ought to get on the ball and outlaw "scientific hunts," a laughably bad excuse. Here is your "scientific hunt:" ONE per year.

"Their violence is unforgivable. ... We must fight against their hypocrisy and lies." Ishikawa-san, it sounds like you are talking about yourselves. In any case, this gives so-called eco-terrorists a good name.
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by jamesho1 November 19, 2007 4:48 PM EST
It''s time to start weeding out these primitive peoples; start blowing them out of the water, literally!
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by watcher269-2009 November 19, 2007 2:59 PM EST
Save the Whales - Shoot the *** that are shooting the Whales.
Reply to this comment
by rushman71 November 19, 2007 2:22 PM EST
"Save the Whales; but shoot the Seals!!!"--Cheech & Chong in "Nice Dreams"
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