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23 July 2001
Greenpeace urges Norway to condmn
Japanese vote buying at the 53rd IWC meeting
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
Iceland's attempt to resume commercial
whaling fails
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London - Iceland's attempt to resume commercial whaling immediately
was rejected by the International Whaling Commission (IWC)
meeting in London today.
Iceland, which quit the IWC in 1992, wanted to rejoin the
Commission with a reservation to the current international
moratorium on commercial whaling and announced that it wanted
the moratorium overturned as quickly as possible so whaling
could resume.
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Whale meat on sale. © Greenpeace |
Today, after a series of votes, the IWC concluded that Iceland
will only have observer status during this week's meeting and will
not be allowed to vote on key issues, such as the possible resumption
of commercial whaling or whether to establish a new whale sanctuary
in the South Pacific.
Before the votes, the world's other two pro-whaling countries,
Norway and Japan, tried to support Iceland's through a series of
legal manoeuvres. The whaling nations were backed up by at least
nine countries that Japan has bought with foreign aid packages to
vote with it at the IWC (1).
This resulted in the votes being very close.
Greenpeace Whale Campaigner Richard Page said: "Greenpeace is relieved
that Iceland's brazen attempt to undermine the IWC has been defeated.
But the fact that the votes were so close is the direct result of
Japan's vote rigging of the commission and is of grave concern."
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