Environmental
groups have welcomed the news that Iceland’s lone fin whaler is abandoning the
hunt this year. Kristjan Loftsson, who has harpooned 280 of the gentle giants
over the past six years, told the local media that he will not be participating
in this year’s season.
Loftsson’s
commercial whaling activities have put Iceland in Barack Obama’s bad books,
with the US president announcing last year that the country could face numerous
diplomatic measures if it continued with the cruel practice. Earlier in the
year the Pelly Amendment was invoked by US Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke,
who condemned Iceland for disregarding the global ban on commercial whaling.
Loftsson,
who exports the meat to his own company in Japan, apparently made his decision
after failing to agree with the Association of Icelandic Fishermen about
conditions and salaries for deckhands working onboard his ship. According to
media reports, he also claims the Japanese demand for whale meat has not
recovered after the 2011 tsunami.
The International
Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) has welcomed the news, but pointed out that
minke whales are still being slaughtered in Iceland. Last year, the two Icelandic companies that
hunt the whales caught 58 minke, while the first victims of this whaling season
were harpooned in recent weeks.
IFAW last
year launched a ‘Meet Us Don’t Eat Us’ campaign in Iceland, aimed at
encouraging tourists to avoid eating whale meat and to support whale watching
and conservation schemes. It also hopes to convince whalers that conservation
activities are a profitable and sustainable alternative to hunting.
Robbie
Marsland, UK Director of IFAW, said, “We are delighted to hear that no more fin
whales will be cruelly and needlessly slaughtered in Iceland. We are also
pleased to hear Mr Loftsson acknowledge that this outdated industry is
uneconomic. This is exactly what IFAW-commissioned research has shown over
recent years; it is just a shame that 280 fin whales had to die in this failed
commercial experiment.”
Related Article:
Iceland tax ruling could spare giant whales
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The tails
of two 35-tonne Fin whales are bound to a
Hvalur boat on the western coast of
Iceland in 2009 (AFP/File,
Halldor Kolbeins)
|


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