Since the release in 2009 of the chilling documentary
The Cove, and thanks to a much-welcomed tweet
last week
from newly minted U.S. Ambassador Caroline Kennedy condemning the
"drive hunt," the herding and butchering of dolphins in the small inlet
in Taiji, Japan, is unlikely to go unnoticed. Last week, fishermen
captured and trapped 250 bottlenose dolphins, and they killed 30 of them
just yesterday.
The
drive hunt
is barbaric. The fishermen use small motorized boats to locate pods of
dolphins and other small whales, and begin herding the animals toward
shore, using the noise of the boats' engines and the banging of pipes
underwater. There are reports, too, of the use of underwater explosives.
Once the animals are on the shore or in the shallow bay, fishermen then
get into the waist-deep water and move through the pods, stabbing
animals to death, in full view of the other pod members. These highly
intelligent animals are slaughtered for meat, pet food, and
fertilizer. The fishermen spare the best specimens and sell them to
marine parks,
consigning them to a less violent but still grim fate, abducted from
their families, never to return to their natural homes, and sentenced to
life in concrete tanks.
In the late 1980s, marine parks and aquariums (including U.S. parks)
and the U.S. Navy began purchasing live animals from Japan, paying many
thousands of dollars for each animal. This contributed to the
profit-making of the Taiji hunters. In 1993, a California marine park
sought to import several dolphins from Japan, but the U.S. government
stipulated that the dolphins could only be imported if they had been
captured "humanely." Because the capture violated the conditions of the
permit, the government prohibited the import. Since then, no dolphins
have been imported into the U.S. from Japan. However, there are other
markets and willing buyers to take the animals, mainly in Asia and the
Middle East.
In response to all this, there have been global demonstrations, boycotts, congressional resolutions, the global distribution of
The Cove,
and most recently, Ambassador Kennedy's courageous statement. All the
while, Japanese officials have defended the slaughter and capture as
their cultural right, retorting that U.S. citizens eat beef and hunt
animals for sport. The Taiji hunt, whilst the most notorious, is one of a
number of hunts of dolphins and small whales conducted in Japanese
waters. In any one year, in combination, these hunts may claim the lives
of some 20,000 cetaceans.
But there has been some progress in Japan. A growing number of
supermarkets in Japan have stopped selling whale and dolphin meat,
including AEON, Ito-Yokado (7-Eleven's parent corporation), Seiyu, and
more. In addition, our supporters have helped us end the sale of dolphin
meat on Internet market sites like Amazon and Google. However,
Yahoo! Japan continues to sell whale and dolphin meat products.
The government of Japan is ultimately responsible for the killing of
these highly intelligent marine mammals, known well to us for their
heroic efforts to protect drowning seafarers or to protect swimmers from
sharks. We can help repay these creatures for their long-standing,
documented record of altruism by continuing to bring pressure on those
who profit from this spectacle in Japan. In the end, we must act
together make it plain that it's only a tiny fraction of people in the
world who would exhibit such callousness and cruelty to animals who
deserve so much better from our species.
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