These are the views of the individuals concerned and may not represent the views of WDCS

WDC welcomes EU Parliament's continued opposition to Japanese Whaling

Friday, October 26. 2012
Author - CEO

Yesterday (25th October 2012), the European Parliament passed a resolution on the development of a a free trade agreement with Japan ( European Parliament resolution of 25 October 2012 on EU trade negotiations with Japan (2012/2711(RSP)).

WDC was pleased to note that the resolution, whilst urging the development of the agreement noted that,

'... the Commission, the Council and Parliament support the maintenance of the global moratorium on commercial whaling and a ban on international commercial trade in whale products, seek to end so-called scientific whaling and support the designation of substantial regions of ocean and seas as sanctuaries in which all whaling is indefinitely prohibited', and,

'Notes that serious divergences remain between the EU and Japan on issues related to the management of fisheries and whaling, notably Japan’s whaling under the guise of scientific whaling, and calls for broader discussions on the matter of the abolition of whale hunting and of trade in whale products'.

This is fully in accordance with EU law that prohibits any commercial whaling or trade in whale products and WDC commends the EU's parliamentarians for ensuring that this issue is front-and-centre in discussions with Japan.

WDC has long argued that EU law means that EU member states cannot vote for any form of commercial whaling and we are pleased to see EU Parliamentarians upholding this position.





Twitter Bookmark WDC welcomes EU Parliament's continued opposition to Japanese Whaling  at del.icio.us Facebook Google Bookmarks FriendFeed Digg WDC welcomes EU Parliament's continued opposition to Japanese Whaling Technorati WDC welcomes EU Parliament's continued opposition to Japanese Whaling Bookmark WDC welcomes EU Parliament's continued opposition to Japanese Whaling  at YahooMyWeb Bookmark WDC welcomes EU Parliament's continued opposition to Japanese Whaling  at reddit.com Bookmark WDC welcomes EU Parliament's continued opposition to Japanese Whaling  at NewsVine Bookmark WDC welcomes EU Parliament's continued opposition to Japanese Whaling  at blogmarks Bookmark using any bookmark manager! Stumble It! Print this article! E-mail this story to a friend!

Where did the Taiji dolphins go?

Friday, October 12. 2012
Author - CEO

It has been confirmed to WDC by Defra (UK Government) that no dolphins were transhipped through Heathrow yesterday, the 11th October.

In a communication to WDC, Defra said,

“The Animal Health and Veterinary Laboratories Agency is aware of suggestions circulating online that dolphins travelling between Japan and the United Arab Emirates transited through Heathrow Airport during the last few days. AHVLA (the UK CITES management authority) has issued no CITES Permits for Dolphins, nor received any applications to do so; neither have AHVLA inspectors at Heathrow Airport been made aware of any such consignment.”

WDC welcomes the fact that these dolphins did not utilise UK airspace, but the fight continues to ensure that no more dolphins are caught in the Japanese dolphin hunts, and that the captivity industry is not a reason for these hunts and captures to continue.

WDC undertands that UK Border Force officers confirmed that the aircraft was not carrying any dolphins.

The question also remains that if these dolphins left Japan, where did they go to and who shipped them?

Also, how did the idea that the UK was the destination get circulated? Maybe those who are behind this trade thought that they could divert attention from the real destination. Its a tactic used called 'misdirection', and in this case it may well have worked.

We shall let you know more as we know it.

Twitter Bookmark Where did the Taiji dolphins go?  at del.icio.us Facebook Google Bookmarks FriendFeed Digg Where did the Taiji dolphins go? Technorati Where did the Taiji dolphins go? Bookmark Where did the Taiji dolphins go?  at YahooMyWeb Bookmark Where did the Taiji dolphins go?  at reddit.com Bookmark Where did the Taiji dolphins go?  at NewsVine Bookmark Where did the Taiji dolphins go?  at blogmarks Bookmark using any bookmark manager! Stumble It! Print this article! E-mail this story to a friend!

Japan and the 'will they, won't they show?'

Tuesday, October 2. 2012
Author - CEO

Recent press reports appeared at first glance to indicate that Japan was considering suspending it Antarctic whaling operations.

The initial euphoria felt by many members of the public proved ill founded when it was revealed that Japan was simply preparing to refurbish its factory whaling ship, the Nissan Maru. The Japanese government has now indicated that this refurbishment will lead to at least another 10 years more whaling.

It would appear that Japan has spent around ¥900 million (approximately €5.7 million) annually since 1988 on subsidizing waiting, so in many ways it should come as no surprise that Japan’s whaling interests have their eyes on the long term goal of a fully sanctioned resumption of commercial whaling.

Japanese whaling interests’ hopes lie either in a compromise deal at the International Whaling Commission (IWC), or a break away by the Japanese government to form a new whaling commission with only pro-whaling interests allowed to participate. Japan regularly threatens to walk out of the IWC but it appears that international presige and its position in the international community acts as a break on such a reckless act.

However, the risk of a compromise is never far away. There have been three attempts at reaching a so-called compromise deal within the IWC since 1997. The first attempt was initiated when the then Irish commissioner, Mr Michael Canney, sought to ‘break the stalemate’ in 1997. In what was to become known as the ‘Irish proposal’ and with oft repeated rhetoric that the ‘IWC was about to break up’, some commissioners at the IWC sought to push through a new form of commercial whaling known as coastal whaling. This would have restricted Japan’s so-called ‘scientific whaling, but would have overturned the moratorium on commercial whaling once-and-for-all.

Again in 2004 Henrik Fisher, the then chair of the IWC, attempted to seek a similar compromise. A concerted effort, supported by the US Government, was taken forward by Bill Hogarth, chair of the IWC between 2005 and 2009, but again, floundered in 2010.

All these proposals failed both because they would have led to the resumption of commercial whaling, and also, because the whalers felt that their continued pressure at the IWC would actually deliver them everything they wanted without having to compromise.

Indeed, the very regularity of the repeated attempts to promote a compromise has become a source of encouragement to the commercial whaling interests. The IWC is populated with new Commissioners every few years, many of whom have no memory of the recent past, and some of whom rush to ‘solve’ what they see as a problem only they can ‘manage’. Each attempt has led to more compromises being proposed from the conservation-led side. The last proposal even considered allowing the hunting of fin and sei whales as well as minke whales. It would have also allowed whaling for at least 10 years before review.

So no wonder that the pro-whaling industrial complex feels that all it needs to do is keep banging away at the IWC, eroding its foundations and seeking to compromise its ability to carry out any conservation action.

The pro-whalers have also sought to encourage aboriginal subsistence waiting to engage in more commercial activities. The most enthusiastic of the ASW hunters have been those in Greenland. Their strategy has been to blur the divisions between ASW and commercial whaling, so making it easier to Japan and her allies to complain that ‘their whaling is no different to that sanctioned already by the IWC’.

It is remarkable is that this all comes at the same time the consumption of whalemeat in Japan and the other countries has continued to rapidly diminish.

The Japanese Dolphin and Whale Action Network (IKAN) has carried out research which shows that Japanese people eat on average only 23.7 g a year of whalemeat, about the same weight as a chocolate bar.

But, despite these facts, the pro-whaling interests still have a tight grip on the decision-making process within Japan, Norway and Iceland.

Japan and her allies appear to be in for the long-haul in this debate. Pro-conservation countries need to also look to the long-game and not seek to falter by pursuing any compromise deal that will simply bring sucour to the pro-whaling interests and encourage them even more. Now is the time to hold fast, to protect the remaining whales, and seek a better future for all us, human and whale-kind alike.


Twitter Bookmark Japan and the 'will they, won't they show?'  at del.icio.us Facebook Google Bookmarks FriendFeed Digg Japan and the 'will they, won't they show?' Technorati Japan and the 'will they, won't they show?' Bookmark Japan and the 'will they, won't they show?'  at YahooMyWeb Bookmark Japan and the 'will they, won't they show?'  at reddit.com Bookmark Japan and the 'will they, won't they show?'  at NewsVine Bookmark Japan and the 'will they, won't they show?'  at blogmarks Bookmark using any bookmark manager! Stumble It! Print this article! E-mail this story to a friend!

What is happening at Sea World?

Friday, September 28. 2012
Author - CEO

It seems the sad litany of injuries to orcas continues at Sea World. Nakai appears to have suffered a serious injury in an incident at Sea World California.


Nakai was born in captivity in September 2001.


SeaWorld are reported to have said that "Nakai is currently receiving
antibiotics and the veterinarians are pleased with the healing progress
of his wound,” Sea World spokesman, Koontz said. Nakai is “swimming comfortably and interacting with other killer whales” at the park, Koontz said.


I am afraid I would be more concerned than Sea World seem to be. The injury is deep and significant. Unfortunately you can also see that Nakai's teeth are very worn, which would be unusual in a wild free orca.


These teeth are typical of captive orcas that have been grinding their teeth on bars and concrete in their tanks.


The cause of the wound is more difficult to assess. According to Sea World the injusry happened when "when he came into contact with a portion of the pool on Sept. 20".


We regularly see problems with captivity for orca, but I have to say that this is one of the most traumatic set of images we have seen for a while.


Please don't frequent Sea World, you are only perpetuating this kind of suffering if you do. You can read more about this incident at the WDCS North American site


Twitter Bookmark What is happening at Sea World?  at del.icio.us Facebook Google Bookmarks FriendFeed Digg What is happening at Sea World? Technorati What is happening at Sea World? Bookmark What is happening at Sea World?  at YahooMyWeb Bookmark What is happening at Sea World?  at reddit.com Bookmark What is happening at Sea World?  at NewsVine Bookmark What is happening at Sea World?  at blogmarks Bookmark using any bookmark manager! Stumble It! Print this article! E-mail this story to a friend!

Dolphin slaughter and what one can say

Thursday, August 30. 2012
Author - CEO

As some of you know we are about to move to a new website. We believe that its going to be easier to find the information you want and we hope that its going to be much easier to follow what WDCS is doing on any one campaign.

With that in mind I thought I would publish a copy of the letter we have just sent to the Japanese Embassy in the UK. Its similar to letters we are sending to other embassies around the world, but we thought you may want to see what we are saying and maybe you would like to do something similar. Of course letters alone can not solve this issue, but we know that the various embassies do note the number of letters they get and what is being said.

When they don't get anything, they tend to assume the issue is no longer of concern. So if you get a chance, please let Japan know how you feel.

And as to what you feel, well, I hope like us, you feel that this is an unnecessary and extremely cruel practice. I am pretty tired of the Japanese whalers rhetoric and personally would say that they cannot continue hide behind statements about 'tradition' and 'culture' and, Japan, as part of the global commons, can no longer pretend that whales and dolphins are not like other animals and therefore are to be treated as nothing but 'unfeeling property'. Time for Japan to change, and sooner rather than later.

Ambassador Keiichi Hayashi
Embassy of Japan
101-104 Piccadilly
London W1J 7JT

via E-mail: ma@fpcjpn.or.jp or info@ld.mofa.go.jp

August 29, 2012

Dear Ambassador Hayashi:

I write on behalf of WDCS, the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, to express our opposition to the dolphin drive hunts that occur annually in the town of Taiji in Wakayama Prefecture.  WDCS will be among those protesting in front of the Embassy on Friday, August 31st because of the ongoing slaughter of dolphins, small whales and porpoises by Japanese fishermen. Similar demonstrations are taking place outside Japanese embassies and consulates around the world in protest of these cruel and unsustainable hunts.

Dolphin drive hunts, also known as “drive fisheries,” occur annually from September through April in the coastal towns of Taiji and Futo. During these hunts, dolphins are encircled by motorboats out at sea and chased into shallow coastal waters where they are trapped with nets. The dolphins are then killed or trapped alive to be sold into captivity. Every aspect of this hunt is extremely cruel: from the exhausting drive from the open ocean that can separate family groups, to confinement in a netted cove where the dolphins are crudely slaughtered. Whether they are killed for their meat, or because they are considered pests in competition for fishery resources, these highly sentient mammals face severe distress, suffering and pain. The dolphins selected alive for sale to aquaria are subjected to an impoverished life in captivity. Many die of stress and injury during, and immediately after, capture and transport to these facilities in Japan and overseas.

More than 2,000 dolphins and small whales may be killed annually in Japan’s drive hunts, including bottlenose, Risso’s, striped and spotted dolphins, and pilot and false killer whales. Up to 20,000 small whales and dolphins may be taken in other hunts along the coastline of Japan, including more than 17,000 Dall’s porpoises taken in northern Hokkaido.

Despite these hunts being the subject of the award-winning documentary, The Cove, which has brought worldwide condemnation of these activities, many Japanese people are unaware that these hunts occur in their country. Additionally, despite growing evidence that the dolphin meat from these hunts is heavily tainted with dangerous levels of mercury and poses a potential threat to human health, the contaminated meat is sold in Japanese supermarkets.

As you are aware, whale and dolphin watching is steadily growing in Japan, along with a growing respect and care for marine life. Wildlife watching is not only a popular activity for locals and tourists alike, but is also a financially viable alternative to killing or capturing dolphins for entertainment. Drive hunts are a direct threat to the valuable whale and dolphin watching industry.

WDCS strongly opposes these drive hunts on both welfare and conservation grounds. We urge you to act now and to heed the voices of the global community opposed to the unsustainable slaughter of entire families and communities of whales and dolphins. Please end the dolphin drive hunts now.

Sincere regards,

Courtney S. Vail
Campaigns and Programs Manager

Twitter Bookmark Dolphin slaughter and what one can say  at del.icio.us Facebook Google Bookmarks FriendFeed Digg Dolphin slaughter and what one can say Technorati Dolphin slaughter and what one can say Bookmark Dolphin slaughter and what one can say  at YahooMyWeb Bookmark Dolphin slaughter and what one can say  at reddit.com Bookmark Dolphin slaughter and what one can say  at NewsVine Bookmark Dolphin slaughter and what one can say  at blogmarks Bookmark using any bookmark manager! Stumble It! Print this article! E-mail this story to a friend!

William M Johnson’s critically-acclaimed 'The Rose-Tinted Menagerie' has been republished as an illustrated Amazon Kindle ebook

Thursday, July 12. 2012
Author - CEO

One of the most influential anti-captivity books of the last Century, and hailed as ‘a ground-breaking work’ upon its original release in 1990, The Rose-Tinted Menagerie explores the role of animals in entertainment, from the gladiatorial contests of ancient Rome and the travelling shows of the Middle Ages, to the circuses and dolphinaria of the 20th century.

When I began with WDCS some twenty years ago, The Rose-Tinted Menagerie was the best primer I could have read. It established in me the burning desire to see dolphin shows end once and for all. It still shocks me that the disturbing shows that Bill highlighted in the early 1990s still blight us now. Maybe they are not the same shows, but there are still captures from the wild, and places like the Georgia Aquarium try to justifty the suffering they cause in the name of 'education'.

Of all the books that inspired me to want to campaign for whales and dolphins this has to be up there as one of the best.
- Chris Butler-Stroud

This is a timely relauch of The Rose-Tinted Menagerie, and I would urge anyone who has not read it to do so. And if you did read it some twenty years ago, then re-read it. It'll show you we still have a way to go in this fight, but knowing where we have come from is the first step in knowing where the journey still needs to take us and what we need to achieve.

About the author

Prior to its first publication in 1990, author and investigative journalist William M Johnson spent five years researching The Rose-Tinted Menagerie. His research took him to big tops, menageries and dolphin pools throughout the length and breadth of Europe, and to circus shows from as far afield as the Soviet Union and the United States. From his own undercover work and from the testimony of scores of ex-circus and dolphin show staff, by 1990 Johnson had built up a formidable catalogue of evidence that, upon publication, dismayed wildlife experts, shocked the casual reader and provoked political debate: The Rose-Tinted Menagerie. While some establishments have since shut their doors forever — such as the infamous dolphin ‘striptease’ revue at the Moulin Rouge in Paris — these historical snapshots lucidly expose forms of cruelty and exploitation tragically still all too prevalent elsewhere, from the brutal capture of dolphins from the wild, to the sordid traveling dolphin shows currently entertaining locals and tourists in the Far East.

You can get a kindle version or an original print version of the book here at Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk

Twitter Bookmark William M Johnson’s critically-acclaimed 'The Rose-Tinted Menagerie' has been republished as an illustrated Amazon Kindle ebook  at del.icio.us Facebook Google Bookmarks FriendFeed Digg William M Johnson’s critically-acclaimed 'The Rose-Tinted Menagerie' has been republished as an illustrated Amazon Kindle ebook Technorati William M Johnson’s critically-acclaimed 'The Rose-Tinted Menagerie' has been republished as an illustrated Amazon Kindle ebook Bookmark William M Johnson’s critically-acclaimed 'The Rose-Tinted Menagerie' has been republished as an illustrated Amazon Kindle ebook  at YahooMyWeb Bookmark William M Johnson’s critically-acclaimed 'The Rose-Tinted Menagerie' has been republished as an illustrated Amazon Kindle ebook  at reddit.com Bookmark William M Johnson’s critically-acclaimed 'The Rose-Tinted Menagerie' has been republished as an illustrated Amazon Kindle ebook  at NewsVine Bookmark William M Johnson’s critically-acclaimed 'The Rose-Tinted Menagerie' has been republished as an illustrated Amazon Kindle ebook  at blogmarks Bookmark using any bookmark manager! Stumble It! Print this article! E-mail this story to a friend!

Keep uptodate with news from the IWC

Wednesday, July 4. 2012

Remember that we are blogging on our test site from the IWC


Link here

Denmark talks of killing whales with baseball bats

Twitter Bookmark Keep uptodate with news from the IWC  at del.icio.us Facebook Google Bookmarks FriendFeed Digg Keep uptodate with news from the IWC Technorati Keep uptodate with news from the IWC Bookmark Keep uptodate with news from the IWC  at YahooMyWeb Bookmark Keep uptodate with news from the IWC  at reddit.com Bookmark Keep uptodate with news from the IWC  at NewsVine Bookmark Keep uptodate with news from the IWC  at blogmarks Bookmark using any bookmark manager! Stumble It! Print this article! E-mail this story to a friend!

IWC blog is on our new test site

Saturday, June 30. 2012
Author - CEO

Dear all,
If you want to follow our blog from the IWC 2012 please link here to our new test site where we are publishing from the meeting in Panama,


http://dev.wdcs.org/en/iwc-2012


best wishes


Chris


Recent posts
Greenland, statistics and the politics of Denmark's claims
WDCS Asks Tour Operators Not To Promote The Consumption Of Whale Meat
What will happen at IWC this year?





Twitter Bookmark IWC blog is on our new test site  at del.icio.us Facebook Google Bookmarks FriendFeed Digg IWC blog is on our new test site Technorati IWC blog is on our new test site Bookmark IWC blog is on our new test site  at YahooMyWeb Bookmark IWC blog is on our new test site  at reddit.com Bookmark IWC blog is on our new test site  at NewsVine Bookmark IWC blog is on our new test site  at blogmarks Bookmark using any bookmark manager! Stumble It! Print this article! E-mail this story to a friend!

Denmark’s balancing act on the issue of whaling

Thursday, June 7. 2012
Author - CEO

WDCS has just been with colleagues to the European Parliament in Brussels to discuss the issue of Denmark's position on the issue of whaling.


You can read an op ed piece we created for the  EU Policy and debate site, EurActiv.Com



http://www.euractiv.com/climate-environment/denmark-balancing-act-issue-whal-analysis-513111



Twitter Bookmark Denmark’s balancing act on the issue of whaling  at del.icio.us Facebook Google Bookmarks FriendFeed Digg Denmark’s balancing act on the issue of whaling Technorati Denmark’s balancing act on the issue of whaling Bookmark Denmark’s balancing act on the issue of whaling  at YahooMyWeb Bookmark Denmark’s balancing act on the issue of whaling  at reddit.com Bookmark Denmark’s balancing act on the issue of whaling  at NewsVine Bookmark Denmark’s balancing act on the issue of whaling  at blogmarks Bookmark using any bookmark manager! Stumble It! Print this article! E-mail this story to a friend!

Who is eating the dolphins in the Channel?

Tuesday, May 8. 2012
Author - CEO

Its all well and good the British blaming the French for, well everything, but can the British actually believe that French fishermen are eating dolphins? Well it seems the media think so. The UK's press ran articles a few days ago trailing that 'dolphins had been filleted'. And this is not the first time this has happened. In the past French fishermen had quite a taste for dolphin.


As can be seen here on this old cigarette card (from 1928) the hunting of dolphins was more widespread than we would have liked to have believed. The card is too small to read here, but it actually says,


'Dolphins often appear in the Channel and off the Cornish coast, where they are sometimes caught in nets...In France their flesh was formerly esteemed a luxury, and under the impression that it was fish, was allowed on fast days!. Dolphins, like Whales are not fishes, but mammals.'


But the question is why is it happening again? Is it just some cruel individuals, or is austerity meaning that people are doing the unthinkable or is it something else? 



We have recently seen a spread of marine bush-meat consumption across parts of the world as people hoover up remaining fish stocks, but its been a while since fishermen turned back the years in Europe. Around fifteen years ago dolphins were washed up on the Cornish coast with similar injuries. Questions were asked then of why would someone do such a thing.




Well it's illegal and it's immoral, and the sooner it's stopped the better. At the same time Europe has to address the source of this problem which is the bycatch of these creatures in fishing nets. It's no good governments saying its terrible that dolphins are dying when consumed whilst not also condemning the slaughter of these remarkable cetaceans in fishing nets.


Yes, if its proven its terrible that someone has eaten dolphin, but why were they caught in the first place?

Twitter Bookmark Who is eating the dolphins in the Channel?  at del.icio.us Facebook Google Bookmarks FriendFeed Digg Who is eating the dolphins in the Channel? Technorati Who is eating the dolphins in the Channel? Bookmark Who is eating the dolphins in the Channel?  at YahooMyWeb Bookmark Who is eating the dolphins in the Channel?  at reddit.com Bookmark Who is eating the dolphins in the Channel?  at NewsVine Bookmark Who is eating the dolphins in the Channel?  at blogmarks Bookmark using any bookmark manager! Stumble It! Print this article! E-mail this story to a friend!