When the talk of the Makah hunt started, all the environmentalists said that 
it was being pushed by outsiders, because if the US Gov allowed the Makah to 
hunt, the Japanese and the Norwegians would use that to justify their own 
commercial whaling activities.  Apparently the environmentalists were right.  
Prudy

In a message dated 01/19/2000 8:28:25 AM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< Subj:     [The_Spike] Whaling Commission Faces Pressure to Change Policy 
 Date:  01/19/2000 8:28:25 AM Eastern Standard Time
 From:  [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Pat Morris)
 Reply-to:  <A HREF="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>
 To:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 From: Pat Morris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 
 
 http://abcnews.go.com/sections/science/DailyNews/iwc990525.html
 
 Japan, U.S. Square Off
 
 
                                                    Whaling Commission Faces
                                                    Pressure to Change Policy
 
 
 
                   By Chris Hawley
                   The Associated Press
                   S T.   G E O R G E’S,  Grenada,  May 25 — Japan and
                   the United States are facing off over whales,
                   with Tokyo accusing Washington of hypocrisy
                   for allowing a native American tribe to hunt
                   whales while refusing the same right to
                   traditional whalers in Japan.
                        The two countries — leading opposite camps at the
                   annual International Whaling Commission meeting here —
                   also clashed over the presence of the international 
activist
                   organization Greenpeace.
                        Japan demanded unsuccessfully that Greenpeace be
                   barred as observers to punish the organization for a
                   November 1998 protest in the French Pacific territory of
                   New Caledonia. Greenpeace members chained a Japanese
                   whaler to the dock and hung from a mooring cable in
                   hammocks all day. Japan claimed the delay cost millions of
                   dollars.
                        “These allegations fall far short of (Japan’s claims 
of)
                   sabotage or terrorism,” a U.S. delegate, Rolland Schmitten,
                   told the meeting.
                        Japan’s demand was rejected 22-9, with three
                   abstentions.
 
                   Japan, Norway Lead the Fight
                   Last week’s kill of a gray whale off Neah Bay in
                   Washington state provided a dramatic prelude to the
                   five-day meeting of 40 nations on the Caribbean island
                   Grenada.
                        Whalers see last week’s highly publicized Makah Indian
                   hunt — the first U.S. kill outside Alaska since a 1986
                   worldwide ban on commercial whaling — as an admission
                   that growing whale populations no longer merit such blanket
                   protection.
                        “The U.S. has no integrity now,” said Paul Watson of
                   the Washington-based Sea Shepherd Conservation Society.
                   “I think we’re on the threshold of a major escalation in
                   whaling.”
                        The controversy was expected at the meeting, as was
                   Japan’s reaction when the commission on Monday
                   dismissed its request — for the 10th year in a row — for
                   indigenous tribes in northern Japan to be allowed to hunt 
50
                   minke whales a year.
                        “It’s a double standard,” said delegate Mayasuki
                   Komatsu. “I mean, our tribes were whaling right up until
                   the moratorium. The Makahs hadn’t killed a whale in 70
                   years!”
                        Twelve countries supported Japan, 15 objected and
                   seven abstained. The other six members don’t have a vote
                   because they haven’t paid their dues.
                        Pro-whaling nations led by Japan and Norway told The
                   Associated Press they would push for an end to the
                   moratorium on commercial whaling even though they don’t
                   have enough votes to do so.
 
                   Research and Restaurants
                   On Monday, when the meeting opened, the two countries
                   accused Washington of trying to sabotage a proposed
                   management plan to end the ban.
                        “They are trying to make it so costly to go whaling 
that
                   we won’t be able to afford it,” complained Stein Owe, a
                   delegate from Norway. “This is their newest strategy for
                   trying to get us to stop.”
                        U.S. delegate Michael Tillman countered: “They point
                   the finger at us. I can point the finger at them. There’s 
no
                   give on their part at all.”
                        The Makah Indian hunt had the blessing of Washington,
                   which has long opposed commercial whaling but says
                   “subsistence whaling” is different.
                        That is controversial, because the commission has
                   allowed quotas for others not dependent on whale meat for
                   survival, including a St. Vincent whaler who was at the
                   conference to defend charges he violated rules by allegedly
                   killing two endangered Humpback calves and their mothers.
 
                        Britain has pledged to vote against St. Vincent 
 receiving
                   another quota. But the Caribbean country is asking for its

                   quota to be increased from two to three humpbacks a year.
 
                        “This is not the Far North, where the only source of
                   protein for people is what comes out of the seas,” said Sue
                   Fisher, campaign manager for the Britain-based Whale and
                   Dolphin Conservation Society.
                        The United States said it feared Japanese tribes would
                   sell the whale meat, commercializing the kills.
                        “We are sympathetic to the needs of these communities
                   … but we are worried about the possible trade of whale
                   meat,” U.S. delegate Rolland Schmitten told the
                   conference.
                        Japan has been criticized for killing 300 minke 
whales a
                   year under a scientific research permit and selling that
                   whale meat to restaurants.
 
 
 http://wolfseeker.com
 http://www.insidetheweb.com/mbs.cgi/mb629759
 http://www.sunlink.net/~wlfskr >>



From: Pat Morris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


http://abcnews.go.com/sections/science/DailyNews/iwc990525.html

Japan, U.S. Square Off


                                                   Whaling Commission Faces
                                                   Pressure to Change Policy



                  By Chris Hawley
                  The Associated Press
                  S T.   G E O R G E’S,  Grenada,  May 25 — Japan and
                  the United States are facing off over whales,
                  with Tokyo accusing Washington of hypocrisy
                  for allowing a native American tribe to hunt
                  whales while refusing the same right to
                  traditional whalers in Japan.
                       The two countries — leading opposite camps at the
                  annual International Whaling Commission meeting here —
                  also clashed over the presence of the international activist
                  organization Greenpeace.
                       Japan demanded unsuccessfully that Greenpeace be
                  barred as observers to punish the organization for a
                  November 1998 protest in the French Pacific territory of
                  New Caledonia. Greenpeace members chained a Japanese
                  whaler to the dock and hung from a mooring cable in
                  hammocks all day. Japan claimed the delay cost millions of
                  dollars.
                       “These allegations fall far short of (Japan’s claims of)
                  sabotage or terrorism,” a U.S. delegate, Rolland Schmitten,
                  told the meeting.
                       Japan’s demand was rejected 22-9, with three
                  abstentions.

                  Japan, Norway Lead the Fight
                  Last week’s kill of a gray whale off Neah Bay in
                  Washington state provided a dramatic prelude to the
                  five-day meeting of 40 nations on the Caribbean island
                  Grenada.
                       Whalers see last week’s highly publicized Makah Indian
                  hunt — the first U.S. kill outside Alaska since a 1986
                  worldwide ban on commercial whaling — as an admission
                  that growing whale populations no longer merit such blanket
                  protection.
                       “The U.S. has no integrity now,” said Paul Watson of
                  the Washington-based Sea Shepherd Conservation Society.
                  “I think we’re on the threshold of a major escalation in
                  whaling.”
                       The controversy was expected at the meeting, as was
                  Japan’s reaction when the commission on Monday
                  dismissed its request — for the 10th year in a row — for
                  indigenous tribes in northern Japan to be allowed to hunt 50
                  minke whales a year.
                       “It’s a double standard,” said delegate Mayasuki
                  Komatsu. “I mean, our tribes were whaling right up until
                  the moratorium. The Makahs hadn’t killed a whale in 70
                  years!”
                       Twelve countries supported Japan, 15 objected and
                  seven abstained. The other six members don’t have a vote
                  because they haven’t paid their dues.
                       Pro-whaling nations led by Japan and Norway told The
                  Associated Press they would push for an end to the
                  moratorium on commercial whaling even though they don’t
                  have enough votes to do so.

                  Research and Restaurants
                  On Monday, when the meeting opened, the two countries
                  accused Washington of trying to sabotage a proposed
                  management plan to end the ban.
                       “They are trying to make it so costly to go whaling that
                  we won’t be able to afford it,” complained Stein Owe, a
                  delegate from Norway. “This is their newest strategy for
                  trying to get us to stop.”
                       U.S. delegate Michael Tillman countered: “They point
                  the finger at us. I can point the finger at them. There’s no
                  give on their part at all.”
                       The Makah Indian hunt had the blessing of Washington,
                  which has long opposed commercial whaling but says
                  “subsistence whaling” is different.
                       That is controversial, because the commission has
                  allowed quotas for others not dependent on whale meat for
                  survival, including a St. Vincent whaler who was at the
                  conference to defend charges he violated rules by allegedly
                  killing two endangered Humpback calves and their mothers.

                       Britain has pledged to vote against St. Vincent
receiving
                  another quota. But the Caribbean country is asking for its
                  quota to be increased from two to three humpbacks a year.

                       “This is not the Far North, where the only source of
                  protein for people is what comes out of the seas,” said Sue
                  Fisher, campaign manager for the Britain-based Whale and
                  Dolphin Conservation Society.
                       The United States said it feared Japanese tribes would
                  sell the whale meat, commercializing the kills.
                       “We are sympathetic to the needs of these communities
                  … but we are worried about the possible trade of whale
                  meat,” U.S. delegate Rolland Schmitten told the
                  conference.
                       Japan has been criticized for killing 300 minke whales a
                  year under a scientific research permit and selling that
                  whale meat to restaurants.


http://wolfseeker.com
http://www.insidetheweb.com/mbs.cgi/mb629759
http://www.sunlink.net/~wlfskr


--------------------------- ONElist Sponsor ----------------------------

Want to send money instantly to anyone, anywhere, anytime?
You can today at X.com - and we'll give you $20 to try it.  Sign
up today at X.com.  It's quick, free, & there's no obligation.
<a href=" http://clickme.onelist.com/ad/xcom ">Click Here</a>

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Moderator: Jimmy Boy Dial
http://www.thespike.com
Community email addresses:
  Post message: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subscribe:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Unsubscribe:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  List owner:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Shortcut URL to this page:
  http://www.onelist.com/community/The_Spike



Reply via email to