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18 July 2001
Japan admits buying whaling votes
in exchange for aid
10 July 2001
World's top
airlines refuse to transport Norwegian whale meat and blubble
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
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23 July 2001
Greenpeace urges Norway to condemn
Japanese vote buying at the 53rd meeting of the International
Whaling Commission
Oslo, Norway - As the International Whaling Commission meets
in London this week, Greenpeace urged the Norwegian Prime
Minister to publicly distance Norway from its traditional
pro-whaling ally, Japan.
This follows last week's startling
admission from a senior Japanese official that Japan has
been using development aid to buy votes at the International
Whaling Commission (IWC).
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Greenpeace protesting outside the Norweigan
Prime Minister's office in Oslo demanding Norway to not supporting
Japanīs vote buying. © Greenpeace/Gillberg |
In an interview broadcast on ABC TV, a senior Japanese official,
Mr Komatsu, described Minke whales as 'cockroaches of the sea' and
admitted that Japan saw development aid as 'a major tool' in ensuring
that key developing countries voted in favour of whaling at the
IWC.
Greenpeace Norway whale campaigner, Frode Pleym says Norway must
distance itself from this shameful corruption. "Every vote Norway
casts on pro-whaling initiatives will take advantage of Japan's
bought votes," said Pleym. "Norway prides itself on the role it
plays within international conventions; if it wants to retain its
credibility, Norway must distance itself from this form of vote
rigging which undermines the IWC and has severe implications for
other international fora."
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Twenty Greenpeace activists from five countries (1) climbed
the Norwegian Prime Minister's office in Oslo to call on Norway
to publicly distance itself Japan, and abstain from voting
at IWC.
At this week's IWC meeting, member states will vote on whether
or not to create a South Pacific
Whale Sanctuary (SPWS). The creation of such a sanctuary
is supported by 16 South Pacific nations (2). South Pacific
nations see the sustainable utilisation of whales as the creation
of a whale watching industry, whereas Japan would rather return
to commercial whaling.
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The world is watching: Greenpeace demonstrates
in front of the Novotel in London where the 53rd IWC meeting
is taking place this week. © Greenpeace/Davison |
Japan has actively recruited developing states to the IWC with
the promise of overseas development aid (ODA). If the proposal fails,
Norway, Japan and their bought allies are set to deny the South
Pacific nations their right to a whale sanctuary.
"Norway can argue that it will vote independently," said Pleym.
"However, it cannot deny that if the vote on the creation of a South
Pacific Whale Sanctuary is defeated, it will be because of the countries
whose vote Japan has bought. This is not international debate or
diplomacy, this is international corruption on a massive scale and
Norway would be guilty by association," he added.

The world is watching. © Greenpeace/Davison |
If Japan's vote buying
goes unchecked, the IWC will effectively be bought by Japan
and whales will be stripped of all protection. |
Notes:
(1) The activists were from Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Germany.
(2) Australia, Fiji, Kiribati, New Zealand, Niue, Papua New Guinea,
Samoa, Tokelau, Cook Islands, Tuvalu, Tonga, American Samoa, New
Caledonia, French Polynesia, Wallis and Futuna.
(3) Six Caribbean countries voted with Japan last year on virtually
every motion at the International Whaling Commission (IWC), including
rejecting an Australian move to create a whale sanctuary in the
South Pacific. Greenpeace believes that Panama and Morocco, who
are joining the IWC this year, despite having no involvement in
whaling or whale conservation have also had their votes 'bought'
by Japan. For a full briefing on vote buying visit http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/Multimedia/Live/FullReport/3525.pdf
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