June 17, 2003 — Japan said Tuesday that it was rethinking its role in the world whaling body and may even consider pulling out after losing a key battle with anti-whaling nations.
Officials in Japan's delegation to the annual meeting of the International Whaling Commission (IWC) in Berlin held a flurry of talks with senior officials in Tokyo.
It followed a closely contested vote Monday when whaling critics succeeded in forcing through a resolution, known as the Berlin Initiative, to beef up the protection of whales.
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Japan is one of the world's top whaling nations, along with Norway and Iceland, which say the commission vote is an attempt to end all whaling for good. Iceland was also considering how to respond to the decision.
"It was a very serious blow to this organization," said Japan's delegation spokesman Joji Morishita.
"Essentially, it totally transforms this organization from one of resource management to one of total prohibition."
Japan's commissioner Minoru Morimoto said the decision "has forced Japan to consider all our options concerning our future participation" in the IWC.
There are understood to be three main options.
They are: leave the IWC altogether; stay in, but resume commercial whaling on a regional level in cooperation with neighbors China, Russia and South Korea; and stay in but refuse to pay its contributions, which are the highest of any member country.
Another option, to quit the annual meeting in symbolic protest, is thought unlikely because there are still several key issues to come up, such as a bid by Japan to kill another 150 Bryde's and 150 minke whales a year.
Monday's decision, passed by 25 votes to 20, was effectively an attempt by its supporters Australia, Britain, France, Germany, New Zealand and the United States to forestall any return to commercial whaling.
It envisages the creation by the IWC of a dedicated conservation committee to protect the whale population from over-fishing, pollution, climate change, sea noise, shipping and accidental catch.
It would also set up a trust fund for conservation-oriented research.
The decision shifts the IWC a significant step away from its founding ethos of whaling regulation to one of whale protection.
By doing so, it effectively reinforces a global moratorium on whaling that has been in place since 1986.
Officials in the Japanese and Icelandic delegation have already threatened not to cooperate with the conservation committee.
The whaling nations accuse their critics of blocking more than a decade of talks aimed at allowing a return to limited commercial whaling by setting up a system of variable catch quotas and inspections known as a revised management scheme.
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Name: Minke Whale (Balaenoptera acutorostrata)
Primary Classification: Mysticeti (Baleen Whales) Location: Worldwide distribution. Habitat: Open ocean, coastal waters, and near ice sheets. More common in cooler regions. Diet: Mostly krill. Also small fish and squid. Size: Up to 35 ft in length and 14 tons in weight. Description: Dark gray to black on top. White underneath. White band on flippers. Narrow, pointed snout. Ridge from snout to blowhole. Baleen plates. Cool Facts: Smallest of the baleen, or filter-feeding, whales. Able to surf ocean breakers and leap completely out of the water. Conservation Status: Lower Risk (Near Threatened) Major Threat: Hunting/Whaling What Can I Do?: Visit The Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society and The Ocean Conservancy for information on how you can help. |
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