guardian.co.uk,
Mimi Bekhechi, Thursday 12 April 2012
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| 'The majority of Canadians are opposed to the annual seal slaughter.' Photograph: Stewart Cook / Rex Features |
This
Thursday marks the official start of Newfoundland's and Labrador's spring
seal-slaughtering season. More than two thousand seals have been killed so far
this year. Many more will be clubbed or shot before sealers hook them in the
eye, cheek or mouth and drag them across the ice floes off Canada's east coast.
Some will be skinned while they are still alive. Each one of them is a victim
of the Canadian government's desperate efforts to keep the failing sealing industry afloat. Many had hoped that the seal slaughter would not happen this
year. The Canadian government's decision to go ahead with this annual bloodbath
– despite the fact that there is no longer any market for seal fur – makes no
economic sense.
What should
have been the final nail in the coffin of the seal slaughter came last December
when Russia – which had been buying 95% of Canadian seal pelts – joined the EU,
Mexico and the US in banning seal-fur imports. Russian president Vladimir Putin
has called seal hunting a "bloody business that should have been banned long ago" and later ended seal imports after Pamela Anderson led an
international appeal on behalf. In September, the EU rejected an obviously
orchestrated attempt by the Canadian government, in its challenge of the EU ban
on seal products, to play the "native Canadian Inuit" card. But the
Inuit live far from "the front" – the area where the mass commercial
slaughter takes place – and are responsible for only about 3% of Canada's
annual seal kill. The EU already exempts Inuit seal products from the ban.
The seal
slaughter most definitely doesn't continue because of support in Canada. Polls
have consistently shown that the majority of Canadians are opposed to the
slaughter. Millions in taxpayer money are being wasted to prop up this dying
industry. The federal government pours up to CAN$7m (£4.4m) a year into
maintaining an industry that nets only about $1m. While seal pelts used to earn
sealers more than $100 each, the Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans
reported that in 2010, pelts were sold for only about $20 to $25. At this rate,
sealers can hardly cover their operating costs.
Very few
sealers took part in the 2011 slaughter, and they killed less than 10% of the
400,000-seal quota. One of the largest seal-processing companies, NuTan Furs,
has just announced that it will not buy any seal pelts this year. The Canadian
government has been trying to peddle seal products in China, but groups like
PETA Asia have been working hard to ensure that doesn't happen. Desperate times
call for desperate measures, and the provincial government of Newfoundland and
Labrador even just announced it would provide $3.6m in financing for a fur processor.
So why does
the Canadian government still allow thousands of seals to be slaughtered in
such barbaric ways, squandering millions in tax dollars and staining the
country's international reputation in the process? It likely won't surprise you
to learn that the answer is politics. Both the liberal and conservative parties
are desperate to control the swing seats in Newfoundland. But now even Canadian
politicians are openly questioning the slaughter. Ryan Cleary, a member of the
Canadian parliament who represents one of the regions in which the seal
slaughter takes place, summed up the general feeling when he acknowledged:
"Part of our history is also whaling, for example, and the day came when
the whaling industry stopped. Now, is that day coming with the seal hunt? It
just may be".

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