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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.
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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24 July 2001
Japanese vote buying sinks South Pacific
Whale Sanctuary
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London - Measures to further protect the world's whales were
undermined today when South Pacific nations were denied their
right to a South Pacific Whale
Sanctuary (SPWS).
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The world is watching as Japan buys their
way back to commercial whaling. © Greenpeace |
Opposition from Japan, Norway and the block of countries that vote
with Japan in return for Overseas Development Aid (1), prevented
the sanctuary proposal from achieving the three quarters majority
it needed to be adopted.
"Yet again Japan's vote buying means that South Pacific Nations
have been denied their right to a whale sanctuary," said Pio Manoa,
Greenpeace whale campaigner from Fiji, who is attending the IWC
meeting in London. "The fact that Japan has bought the votes
of many developing countries, some of which are island states, is
a slap in the face to the South Pacific and has grave consequences
for the future protection of whales" he added.
South Pacific Nations have repeatedly requested that the sanctuary
be established, most recently in a statement issued in Apia, Samoa
in April 2001 (2). The proposal had the backing of South Pacific
island states whose waters it would have covered and the majority
support of countries at the IWC meeting.(3)
Today's vote followed last week's startling admission from a senior
Japanese official that Japan has been using
development aid to buy votes at the IWC (4).
Japan is openly corrupting the IWC in order to prevent further
conservation of whales and to advance its pro-whaling initiatives.
Norway, Japan's closest ally at the IWC and the only other country
that actively whales commercially, at present refuses to denounce
Japanese vote buying and is actively benefiting from it. Unless
challenged, Japan's vote buying is set to continue.
Namibia and Gabon, who recently signed lucrative fisheries deals
with Japan, have now become observers of the IWC. It is expected
that by next year's IWC meeting in Shimonoseki, Japan, May 2002,
Namibia and Gabon will have become fully fledged members and will
vote in support of Japan and Norway's pro- whaling initiatives.
"It is scandalous that Japan can simply buy its own way at the
IWC and undermine the will of a vast majority of people worldwide
who want to see whales protected. Unless the international community
publicly condemns this blatant corruption, it may only a matter
of months before we see a return to full scale commercial whaling
and international trade in whale products," concluded Manoa.
Read
more daily updates on the Greenpeace UK site
Notes: Twenty countries voted in favour of the South Pacific
Whale Sanctuary, thirteen against it. Ireland, Oman, Morocco and
the Solomon Islands abstained on the vote.
(1) Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, Rep of Guinea, St Kitts
and Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent and The Grenadines and Panama. Others
that voted against the proposal were: China, Denmark, Japan, Korea
and Norway.
(2) The Apia Statement was signed by: Ministers of Australia, Fiji,
Kiribati, New Zealand, Niue, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Tokelau; Ministerial
Representatives from Cook Islands, Tuvalu and Tonga; Representatives
of American Samoa, New Caledonia, French Polynesia, Wallis and Futuna.
(3) Countries that voted in favour of the proposal were: Argentina,
Australia, Chile, Finland, Germany, India, Mexico, Monaco, South
Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, New Zealand, Austria, Brazil,
France, Italy, the Netherlands, the U.K. and the U.S.
(4) In interview broadcast on ABC TV last week, 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.
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