guardian.co.uk,
Associated Press in Tokyo, Tuesday 4 October 2011
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| Japanese whaling ship No. 3 Yushin Maru (left) and the Sea Shepherd's ship the Bob Barker collide last year. Whalers will have more security to fend off activists this year. Photograph: AP |
Japan will
go ahead with its whaling me in the Antarctic later this year under heightened
security to fend off activists who have vowed to disrupt the annual hunt, the
country's fisheries minister said Tuesday.
Japan's
whale hunts have become increasingly tense in recent years because of clashes
with the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. The most recent expedition was cut
short after several high-seas confrontations, and it was unclear whether the
hunt would be held at all this year.
But
fisheries minister Michihiko Kano said that measures would be taken to ensure
the whalers' safety, and that the hunt would go ahead. It is expected to begin
in December.
"We
intend to carry out the research after enhancing measures to assure that it is
not obstructed," he said.
Commercial
whaling has been banned since 1986, but Japan conducts whale hunts in the
Antarctic and the north-western Pacific under an exception that allows limited
kills for research purposes.
Japan's
government claims the research is needed to provide data on whale populations
so that the international ban on commercial whaling can be re-examined – and,
Japan hopes, lifted – based on scientific studies.
Opponents
say the programme is a guise for keeping Japan's dwindling whaling industry
alive. The Sea Shepherd group, which is already rallying to block the upcoming
hunt, has been particularly dogged in its efforts to stop the kills.
Last year's
season was marred by repeated incidents with Sea Shepherd vessels, one of which
sank after colliding with a Japanese ship. The boat's captain, New Zealander
Peter Bethune, was later arrested when he boarded a whaling ship from a jet
ski, and brought back to Japan for trial.
He was
convicted of assault, vandalism and three other charges and given a suspended
prison term. Bethune has since returned to New Zealand.
Sea Shepherd
recently announced that it is calling its effort to obstruct the December
expedition "Operation Divine Wind" – a reference to the
"kamikaze" suicide missions carried out by the Japanese military in
World War II.
Though
vilified by anti-whaling organisations around the world, the government's
strong pro-whaling position has the support of the Japanese public, according
to an AP poll conducted in July and August which found that 52% favour it, with
35% neutral and 13% opposed.
Once a
common item on school lunch menus, whale meat can be found in stores and
restaurants in Japan. But, because of its relatively high price, it is
generally regarded as a gourmet food by the public.

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