Special Action Alert - JAPAN


JAPAN STILL DEFIES INTERNATIONAL LAW

During the first week of November, 1996 five Japanese whaling vessels left the ports of Hiroshima and Yamaguchi in western Japan bound for the Antarctic to catch another haul of Minke whales.


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ACTION ALERT

Find YOUR closest Japanese Embassy and phone, fax or write to the Ambassador telling him how senseless the Minke whale (killing) research really is.

Send copies to:

His Imperial Highness
The Emperor of Japan
Imperial Household Agency
1-1 Chiyoda, Chiyoda-ku
Tokyo 100, Japan
"Your Imperial Highness,"

Mr Domiichi Murayama
Prime Minister of Japan
Prime Minister's Office
1-6-1 Nagata-cho, Chiyoda-ku
Tokyo 100, Japan
"Dear Prime Minister,"
email: jpm@kantei.go.jp

-HOMEPAGE-

The Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries:
email address: white56@sc.maff.go.jp

-HOMEPAGE-

His Excellency Mr Hiroki Fuji
Ambassador E&P
Embassy of Japan
101-104 Piccadilly,
London. W1V 9FN
tele: +44 (0)171 465 6500 email: info@embjapan.org.uk

Where are they going?

Into the "Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary" a place designated by International Law for the protection of all whale species. The Antarctic and its inhabitants are also protected by the "Antarctic Treaty" of 1959 to which Japan is also a signatory!

During the 1995 yearly meeting of the world's whaling organisation, to which Japan is a member, resolutions on the rules of whaling were made:

  • Strong resolutions were passed to make it more difficult to justify "scientific" whaling and to discourage "scientific" whaling in sanctuaries.
  • An attempt by Japan to use pollution research as a justification for catching whales in the Southern Ocean was defeated.
  • A request by Japan for an "intrim" coastal quota of 50 Minke whales in the North Pacific was defeated.
  • Japan's attempt to have the IWC seek an outside opinion on the legality of having established the Southern Ocean Sanctuary was defeated.
Again, in 1996, resolutions were made:
  • A strong resolution requesting Japan to halt its scientific whaling in the Souther Ocean Sanctuary was passed by a large majority. (In the last Antarctic season, Japan killed 440 minke whales in the Sanctuary.)
  • Japan's request, made for the 9th year, for an "interim quota" of 50 minke whales despite the moratorium was defeated by a stronger vote than in previous years.

The Japanese Government has ignored the law and bowed down to big business and to the "all-mighty yen" by issuing permits for the slaughter of Minke whales in the Antarctic. Without these permits their whaling fleet would be dry-docked and the killing stopped. So, how can Japan issue permits while the rest of the world abstains?

Through an old rule implimented many years ago, and designed to get whalers to care a little about the well being of the heards of whales instead of the profits they made, Japan is bye-passing the "Moratorium on Commercial whaling" by calling their hunting "Scientific". Their scientific whaling killed 440 whales last season while Norway's declared "Commercial whaling", which is banned, killed only 382. So who's commercial and who's scientific?

Further investigation reveals that Norwegian whalers sell their whale meat to markets within their own borders, for their own consumption, and call it "commercial". Japanese whalers sell their whale meat to markets within their own borders, for their own consumption, and call it "scientific". So what's the difference?

Japan says it needs to know what the Minke whales are eating. So they have to kill the animals to look inside their stomachs. Since the whale is now dead and guided by a rule (one that they want to follow) they bring the whale meat back to Japan and sell it so that it is not wasted. If Japan didn't kill the whales to start with they wouldn't have to dispose of them. Truth is we all know what whales eat! You only need read a book!

Another interesting observation worth mentioning is why the whale meat needs to be sold.

Japan sells the meat to help fund the research!

I'm pretty sure researchers all over the world would like to get funding for their research from the "field", rather than grovel to their sponsors, except for one thing. Responsible, intelligent people don't kill the animals they are trying to save. What would happen if researchers killed the Rhinoceros to sell the horn to fund the research? There would be no rhino's left to research! What about Panda's?

So Japan, what came first the chicken or the egg, the research or the market? It seems pretty simple to me . . .

  • Don't do the research,
  • Don't go to the Antarctic,
  • Don't spend money,
  • Don't need funding,
  • Don't kill Minke whales.

There is a thing called "benign research" it doesn't kill whales but it is expensive and it doesn't put whale meat on the table. Does it?


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