Subscribe to daily environment news





 

Click for news Click for pictures
National Tree Day

Planet Ark Home


Greenpeace Vows to Disrupt Japanese Whaling
Mail this story to a friend | Printer friendly version

SOUTH AFRICA: November 21, 2005


CAPE TOWN - Greenpeace activists will put their lives on the line to disrupt this year's Japanese whaling hunt, the group said on Friday.


"Greenpeace will get out there and put ourselves between the whale and the harpoon to defend our oceans," Shane Rattenbury, head of the group's Ocean Campaign, told reporters in Cape Town's harbour.

The activist group will leave South Africa in two ships within the next few days to search the vast Southern Ocean to confront the whalers and stop the hunt, he said.

A six-ship Japanese fleet left for the Antarctic last week and plan to double its target catch, spearing more than 900 minke whales, and 10 fin whales -- an endangered species second in size only to the blue whale.

Tokyo maintains that whale meat is an important part of its culinary tradition, but anti-whaling nations and environmental groups condemn as cruel and unnecessary the practice of hunting the giant marine mammals.

Rattenbury said uncontrolled commercial whaling over the past century had wiped out 90 percent of the planet's whales, and has brought many species to the brink of extinction.

"We are facing a growing wave of ocean extinction, our seas have reached a tipping point with scores of species of fish, birds and mammals edging towards extinction," he said.

The planned confrontation is the first phase of a 14-month campaign that will see Greenpeace vessels sail the world to gather research and drum up support for a campaign to declare 40 percent of the world's oceans protected areas.

Japan abandoned commercial whaling in 1986 in line with an international moratorium and began what it calls a research programme the following year, but meat still ends up on plates in restaurants.

The International Whaling Commission passed a non-binding resolution at a meeting in June that urged Japan to scrap research whaling altogether, while Japan lobbied for commercial whaling to be allowed again.

It threatened to withdraw from the commission and form a new regulatory body with other whaling nations such as Norway.


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

Reuters



© 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
top

 
21 NOV 2005
ENVIRONMENT
NEWS

AUSTRIA:
INTERVIEW - Vienna Cardinal Draws Lines in Intelligent Design Row

CANADA:
Canada Duck has Nonlethal Avian Virus: Cull Proceeds

CANADA:
Inco to Face Class Action Suit Over Contamination

CHINA:
China Reports Two New Outbreaks of Bird Flu

CHINA:
Birdflu Survivors May Not Be All That Safe - Experts

FRANCE:
France Wants to Raise EU Limits on Biofuel Use

GERMANY:
German Protesters Disrupt Nuclear Waste Transfer

INDIA:
Wanted: Dead Animals to Save Threatened Vultures

INDIA:
India Oil Demand May Grow 5 Pct 2005/6 - Minister

IRELAND:
FEATURE - Warm Glow of Irish Peat Takes Edge off Oil Woes

KENYA:
INTERVIEW - UN to Set Up Bird Flu Early Warning System

KENYA:
Bird Import Ban May Worsen Flu Epidemic - UN Official

MEXICO :
Mexican Divers Try to Fix Storm-Wracked Coral Reef

MEXICO :
Mexico Sees Bigger Butterfly Migration This Year

MEXICO :
Mayan Homes Still Flooded, Crops Ruined

PHILIPPINES:
Smoggy Manila Speeds Compliance with Clean Air Law

SOUTH AFRICA:
Greenpeace Vows to Disrupt Japanese Whaling

SWITZERLAND:
FEATURE - WHO's "War Room" Prepares for Bird Flu Pandemic

UK:
UK's Blair Should Expand Nuclear Power - Adviser

USA:
Strong Quake Hits Indonesia, No Damage Reported

USA:
FEATURE - Surge in US Sea Lion Numbers Angers Fishermen

USA:
Gloomy Asbestos Study Criticized at US Senate Hearing

USA:
Gamma Weakens to Tropical Depression

VIETNAM:
Bird Flu Flares Up in Northern Vietnam

ZIMBABWE:
Zimbabwe Finds Uranium, To Make Electricity - Mugabe



previous day
today's news
next day