Jakarta Globe – AFP, 7 October 2013
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Environmental
activists wear dolphin costumes to protest the annual slaughter
of dolphins in
Taiji, Japan, in front of the Japanese embassy in Manila on
October 14, 2010
(AFP/File, Ted Aljibe)
|
Tokyo — The
Japanese town made infamous by the Oscar-winning documentary "The
Cove" will open a marine park where visitors can swim with dolphins, but
its annual slaughter of the creatures will continue in a nearby bay, an
official said Monday.
The town of
Taiji has begun researching a plan to section off part of a cove and turn it
into a place where people can swim and kayak alongside small whales and
dolphins, Masaki Wada told AFP.
But, the
government official insisted, far from having caved in to pressure from
conservationists who want an end to an annual hunt that turns waters red with
blood, the project was aimed at helping to sustain the practice.
"We
already use dolphins and small whales as a source of tourism in the cove where
dolphin-hunting takes place," he said.
"In
summer swimmers can enjoy watching the mammals that are released from a
partitioned-off space.
![]() |
Map
locating Taiji in Japan, which is to open a marine park where visitors can
swim
with dolphins (AFP)
|
"But
we plan to do it on a larger scale. This is part of Taiji's long-term plan of
making the whole town a park, where you can enjoy watching marine mammals while
tasting various marine products, including whale and dolphin meat," he
said.
The park
will be separate from Hatakejiri Bay, the place into which the fishermen of
Taiji corral dolphins, select a few dozen for sale to aquariums and marine
parks, and stab the rest to death for meat.
The plan
calls for the creation of a whale safari park stretching roughly 28 hectares
(69 acres) by putting up a net at the entrance to Moriura Bay in northwestern
Taiji, the official said.
The 2009
film "The Cove" brought Taiji to worldwide attention, winning an
Oscar the following year, after graphically showing the killing, including by
using underwater cameras. Activists continue to visit the town to protest the
hunt.
Taiji, in
western Wakayama prefecture, is looking to open part of the park within five
years, Wada said.
![]() |
Illustration:
two Risso's dolphins are herded by
fishing boats near the village of Taiji,
central
Japan. (AFP/File, Ryan Nakashima)
|
Wakayama
prefecture said the town caught 1,277 dolphins in 2012 and has licence to
capture 2,026 this season, which began in September and runs until August next
year.
Tokyo-based
conservationist group Iruka & Kujira (Dolphin & Whale) Action Network
(IKAN) said the plan was "unfortunate" for the town.
"The
whole plan is based on the concept that they can exploit dolphins and whales
freely as their resource, but the mammals don't belong to Taiji," said
Nanami Kurasawa, the IKAN secretary general.
"Marine
mammals migrate across oceans, and internationally public opinion is that
wildlife should be allowed to live as they are. The plan will only ignite more
protests over dolphin-hunting," she said.
People in
Taiji argue that dolphin-hunting is part of a 400-year-old whaling and culinary
tradition. They charge that campaigns against it are cultural imperialism that
neglects the parallels between killing dolphins and killing cattle.
But
Kurasawa said demand for dolphin meat is dwindling and only 100 people of the
3,400 population are engaged in dolphin hunting-related businesses.
"If
they want to get more tourists, they can for example exhibit the beautiful whale-hunting
ships used in ancient days, that would show their tradition without stirring
more controversy," she said.
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