Japan
vows to continue whale hunt
Japan
has confirmed that it intends to return to the Antarctic to hunt
whales. It follows a landmark ruling in the International Court of
Justice.
12
April 2014
Japan's
Institute of Cetacean Research has today filed court papers in the
United States stating it intends to return to hunt whales in the
Southern Ocean in the 2015-2016 season.
Last
month the International Court of Justice ruled that Japan's whaling
programme was not conducted for scientific research purposes as
defined under International Whaling Commission regulations.
It
ordered Japan to stop all whaling with immediate effect. The case had
been taken up by Australia and supported by New Zealand.
But
the ICR has filed court briefs with the US District Court in Seattle
stating it intends to return to the Southern Ocean with a
newly-designed research programme.
The
Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, which has been fighting to protect
whales in the region, says Japan's move is not surprising, and called
it a blatant show of defiance to the ICC's ruling.
The
organisation says it will get its boats ready and return to the
Southern Ocean to protest the slaughter of whales, if and when Japan
returns.
A
director of Sea Shepherd New Zealand Michael Lawry says he doubt's
Japan new whaling research programme will fit with the International
Whaling Commission regulations, because any such programme must use
humane methods and not kill whales for commercial reasons.
After
the ICJ ruling in March, Japan said it would cease its whaling
programme. The Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said Japan would
abide by the court ruling.
A
spokesperson for the Institute of Cetacean Research confirmed on
Saturday confirmed that the papers had been filed, but would not
comment any further.
Japan
has used a legal loophole in the 1986 ban on commercial whaling that
allowed it to continue slaughtering the mammals, ostensibly so it
could gather scientific data. However, it has never made a secret of
the fact that the whale meat from these hunts end on dining tables.
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