Greenpeace
whales  |  whaling  |  environmental impacts  |  solutions  |  greenpeace & the whales
home  |  news  |  the expedition  |  photo/video gallery  |  documents  |  links  |  join  |  act
  news


 -  whales screensaver
 -  send an ecard
 -  play the game

Join Greenpeace
act


 

other recent news

26 February 2002
Anti-whaling countries held to randsom

23 January 2002
Vote buying is as lethal for whales as a live harpoon.

16 January 2002
Buying the world's whales - Greenpeace exposes multi million price tag.

1 January 2002
Greenpeace congratulates Australian government - Japanese whalers should leave.

16 December 2001

Greenpeace hit with super water cannons by Antarctic whalers

16 November 2001

6 November 2001
Seventeen countries protest departure of whaling fleet

5 November 2001
Worldwide protest urges Japanese whaling fleet "Don't Go!"

3 August 2001
Greenpeace calls for halt to seismic testing

27 July 2001
Increasing environmental threats to whale populations exposed as IWC is overshadowed by Japanese vote buying

26 July 2001
Japan tries to obstruct moves to protect critically endangered whale populations

25 July 2001
British ex-whaler speaks out in support of the global whaling ban


24 July 2001
Japanese vote buying sinks South Pacific Whale Sanctuary

23 July 2001
Iceland's attempt to resume commercial whaling fails.

23 July 2001
Greenpeace urges Norway to condemn Japanese vote buying at the 53rd IWC meeting.

18 July 2001
Japan admits buying whaling votes in exchange for aid.

IWC media briefing materials:
Japanese Whaling: the truth behind the Fisheries Agency of Japan's public relations campaign
Vote buying: Japan's strategy to secure a return to large-scale whaling
Norwegian whaling: an export driven industry
Whale watching and Caribbean Island tourism
Whales in a degraded ocean

10 July 2001
World's top airlines refuse to transport Norwegian whale meat and blubber.

27 June 2001
Factory fishing not whales is the cause of low fish stocks.

10 May 2001
Japan continues to mock science - whaling fleet will set out on third hunt within a year.


3 May 2001
Norway embarks on whale hunt for commercial export.

27 April 2001
Caribbean's support South Pacific Whale Sanctuary

press release archive

 

1 April 2002

Japanese government shows the world how to lie with statistics

Amsterdam - An independent poll released on Saturday by the Japanese national newspaper, the Asahi Shimbun shows Japanese attitudes toward whales to be significantly different than that reflected in the government commissioned poll released two weeks ago.

In that poll, the government claimed that 75 percent of the Japanese people favour a return to commercial whaling under controlled conditions. The Asahi Shimbun poll in contrast shows that only 47 percent of the Japanese public agree with whale hunting. This is down by seven percent from Asahi Shimbun's 1993 poll figure showing 53 percent of those polled supporting whale hunting. According to the current poll over one third of the Japanese public opposed whaling. (1)

Significantly, the Asahi Shimbun poll which questioned 3000 people reveals a shift in attitude toward supporting the protection of whales based upon a concern for damage to the marine ecosystem and away from a concern that the rest of the world is bashing Japan because of its food culture. (2)

“These poll results shows that the Japanese public is not as pro-whaling as the Fisheries Agency of Japan would like to make out. In fact, the government poll which used leading questions is just a thinly disguised public relations stunt in their campaign to lift the moratorium on commercial whaling,” said John Bowler, Greenpeace oceans campaigner. “What this latest poll shows is the extent to which the Government of Japan is prepared to go to push its whaling agenda, even to the point of hoodwinking its own public. However, we are pleased to see that support for whaling in Japan is continuing to decline.”

This latest revelation underscores the increasingly fractious atmosphere between the Japanese government and conservation-minded governments and environmental groups in the run up to the May meeting of the International Whaling Commission in Shimonoseki, Japan. It is expected that pro-whaling countries will follow Japan's lead in attempting to abolish existing whale sanctuaries and push for the resumption of commercial whaling. Greenpeace has accused the Fisheries Agency of Japan of buying the allegiance of developing countries through granting of Overseas Development Assistance in return for their votes at the IWC. (3)

“The Fisheries Agency has attempted to portray the whaling issue as Japan-bashing. It's not, it's about Japan forcing back the resumption of large scale commercial whaling of the kind that devastated so many whale populations in the past. If the Government of Japan is successful, some countries are likely to follow suit. Whales are already threatened by changes in the ocean environment. A return to whaling is the last thing the whales need,” said Bowler.

Notes:

1) In The Asahi Shimbun poll 36 percent polled said that they opposed the resumption of commercial whaling. This is up from 35 percent opposed in 1993.

2) When asked why they opposed commercial whaling 21 percent said that wild animals should be protected (up by 12 percent from 9 percent in 1993). Eleven percent said people don't need to eat whale meat while four percent said they were against whaling because of Japan-bashing (down by 11 percent from 15 percent in 1993).

3) In the run-up to the 2001 IWC meeting a senior member of the Japanese delegation, Mr. Komatsu, confirmed that Japan was vote buying. In an interview with ABC TV, Australia, Mr. Komatsu admitted that Japan had to use the “tools of diplomatic communications and promises of overseas development aid to influence members of the International Whaling Commission". The Fisheries Agency of Japan’s vote buying programme is gathering momentum. At the 1993 meeting the Fisheries Agency had just five countries on their payroll. By 1999 there were seven. Japan brought one new country into the IWC in 2000 and two more in 2001. The Agency now enjoys the support of ten nations whose votes are paid for: Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Guinea, Grenada, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, St. Lucia, St. Kitts and Nevis, Solomon Island, Panama and Morocco. All of these except Morocco vote with Japan on every issue. The votes of these countries, combined with those of nations like China, Korea, Norway and Russia, which vote with Japan for their own reasons mean that the Fisheries Agency is within three or four votes of having a majority in the IWC. The Fisheries Agency of Japan is believed to have stepped up its vote buying drive, concentrating on West Africa.

 
       
  up