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Icelandic Resumption Of Commercial Whaling "Disturbing" Says IUCN

The Icelandic fisheries ministry announced on Tuesday that it would authorise commercial whaling again, making it only the second country after Norway to hunt whales for commercial reasons.
by Staff Writers
Geneva (AFP) Oct 17, 2006
The World Conservation Union (IUCN) said on Tuesday that Iceland's decision to resume commercial whaling was disturbing and warned that more countries could renege on the international moratorium on whale hunting. "We're disappointed by this development and disturbed by it because the amount of whaling is increasing," the IUCN's representative on whaling, Justin Cooke, told AFP.

"In IUCN's view it would be much better if the countries return to the negotiating table and conclude a regulatory system so that the kind of renegade whaling by Iceland and other countries won't occur," he added.

Cooke said Iceland had warned that it was likely to resume whaling when talks at the International Whaling Commission on a regulated system were suspended amid disagreement earlier this year.

The whaling commission narrowly passed a resolution in June declaring that a 20-year moratorium on commercial whale hunting, which is designed to preserve sparse whale populations, was "no longer necessary".

The Icelandic fisheries ministry announced on Tuesday that it would authorise commercial whaling again, making it only the second country after Norway to hunt whales for commercial reasons.

"IUCN is concerned that the failure to conclude an international regime for the regulation for whaling means that unilateral whaling by countries is likely to increase," Cooke said.

Iceland authorised whalers to hunt 30 minke whales and nine fin whales in the period from September 1, 2006, to August 31, 2007. A ministry official said the meat would be exported.

Cooke said those were largely symbolic levels of whaling but cautioned that a move to export meat would be worrying.

"That would mean Iceland is not just turning its back on the International Whaling Commission but also on another convention on the trade on endangered species," he said.

The United Nations Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna (CITES) forbids trade in big whales. The convention has been signed by 160 countries, including whaling nations Iceland, Norway and Japan.

Japan abides by the whaling commission moratorium but conducts some "research" whaling through what opponents say is a loophole in the IWC charter.

Iceland had also respected the whaling moratorium until Tuesday. Norway ignores it.

Around 2,000 whales are hunted and killed each year.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Norwegian Whalers Unlikely To Fill Quota
Oslo (AFP) Aug 18, 2006
Norway's whalers are unlikely to fill their quota before the end of the hunting season on August 31, officials said Friday, due to poor weather, high oil prices and dwindling demand for whale meat. "They can't fill the quota this year," Harvard P. Johansen, deputy director-general of the Norwegian ministry of fisheries, told AFP.







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