Jakarta Globe – AFP, September 18, 2013
![]() |
| In this file picture taken on January 2, 2013 shark fins drying in the sun cover the roof of a factory building in Hong Kong. (AFP Photo/Antony Dickson) |
Hong Kong.
Hong Kong’s government said Friday it would stop serving shark fin at official
functions as “a good example,” following years of lobbying by conservation
groups.
The
southern Chinese city is one of the world’s biggest markets for shark fin,
which is viewed by many Asians as a delicacy and is often served as a soup at
expensive Chinese banquets.
Along with
shark fin, bluefin tuna will also fall under the ban, which was prompted by
what authorities called “conservation concerns.”
“The
exclusion of these… items from official menus is a start and also serves as an
example of raising public education and awareness on sustainability,” a
government spokesman said in a press release.
“The
government is determined to take the lead and set a good example on this
front,” he said.
Trade in
shark fin is not regulated in Hong Kong except for three species — basking
shark, great white shark and whale shark — where the trade is restricted under
the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and
Flora (Cites), to which Hong Kong is a signatory.
More than
70 million sharks are killed every year, with Hong Kong importing about 10,000
tonnes annually for the past decade, according to environmental group WWF. Most
of those fins are then exported to mainland China.
Shark
conservationists applauded the government’s move saying it was a step towards
ending the trade globally.
“Today’s
decision is another important milestone towards ending shark mortality
globally,” Program Manager at Hong Kong Shark Foundation Emma Kong said in a
statement, adding shark conservation momentum in the city had been building for
years.
“After
almost a decade of advocacy in the form of petitions, protest marches, letter
writing and media campaigns, the Hong Kong government has finally seen fit to
do the right thing — for which we applaud them,” Alex Hofford, the executive
director of Hong Kong-based marine conservation group MyOcean, told AFP.
“We hope
the citizens of Hong Kong can follow suit and finally lay this abhorrent
tradition to rest,” Hofford said.
“The
announcement is particularly significant as Hong Kong is the world’s largest
shark fin market, representing approximately 50 percent of the global trade”
said Joshua Reichert, the executive vice president of the Pew Charitable Trusts
said.
Reichert
also said populations of Pacific bluefin had declined around 96 percent,
according to a recent study.
Campaigners
say the trade has left up to a third of open-water species on the brink of
extinction.
Marine
conservationists expressed outrage in January after images emerged of a factory
rooftop in Hong Kong covered in thousands of freshly sliced shark fins.
They
estimated there were 15,000 to 20,000 fins being laid to dry on the rooftop on
Hong Kong island ahead of an anticipated surge in demand over Lunar New Year in
the following month of February.
In January
last year, luxury hotel group Shangri-La said it would stop serving shark fin
at its properties worldwide to protect the marine predators, following the
example of Hong Kong-based Peninsula Hotels group, which said it would stop
serving shark fins in 2011.
Shangri-La
said it would also phase out Bluefin tuna and Chilean sea bass, which are under
threat of extinction.
The city’s
flag-carrier Cathay Pacific Airlines in September last year followed suit,
saying it was “the right thing to do” in no longer carrying unsustainably
sourced shark products on its cargo flights.
In 2011,
almost 80 percent of Hong Kongers said considered it socially acceptable to
leave shark fin soup off the menu for a wedding banquet, a survey by a shark
conservation group said.
Agence France-Presse

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.