Activists
say case brought before international court of justice by Australia is
make-or-break for whales' future in Southern Ocean
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| Japan has killed more than 10,000 whales under its scientific whaling programme since 1988, according to Australia. Photograph: Kate Davison/AP |
The leading
court at the UN will rule on Monday on whether Japan has the right to hunt
whales in the Antarctic, an emotive case that activists say is make-or-break
for the mammals' future.
Australia
took Japan to the international court of justice (ICJ) in The Hague in 2010,
accusing Tokyo of exploiting a loophole by hunting whales as scientific
research to get around a 1986 ban on commercial whaling.
Australia
has asked the ICJ to order Japan to stop its Jarpa II research programme and
"revoke any authorisations, permits or licences" to hunt whales in
the Southern Ocean.
During
hearings last year, Canberra accused Tokyo of doing nothing more than
"cloaking commercial whaling in a labcoat of science".
Norway and
Iceland maintain commercial whaling programmes in spite of the 1986
International Whaling Commission (IWC) moratorium, but Japan insists its
programme is scientific, while admitting that the resulting meat ends up on
plates back at home.
Japan has
killed more than 10,000 whales under the programme since 1988, according to
Canberra, allegedly putting it in breach of international conventions and its
obligation to preserve marine mammals and their environment.
In its
application to the ICJ, Australia accused Japan of failing to "observe in
good faith the zero catch limit in relation to the killing of whales".
Japanese
officials declined to comment on specifics ahead of the ruling, but a fisheries
agency official said it maintained the view that "Japan's whaling is
purely for the purposes of obtaining scientific data, so that whale resources
can be sustainably maintained".
Tokyo has
consistently defended the practice of eating whalemeat as a culinary tradition.
Its lawyers have said the Japanese have a "proud tradition of living in
harmony with nature, and utilising living resources while respecting sustainability".
The
country's fisheries minister, Yoshimasa Hayashi, vowed last year that Japan
would never stop its "long tradition and culture" of whaling.
Japanese
officials have said Tokyo will accept the verdict from the ICJ, set up after
the second world war to rule in disputes between countries.
Australia
also said it would respect the ruling, but added that its views were clear.
"We oppose all commercial whaling, including Japan's so-called
'scientific' whaling."
In April
last year, Japan announced its whaling haul from the Southern Ocean was at a
record low because of "unforgivable sabotage" by activists from the
Sea Shepherd environmental group.
Sea
Shepherd has called the ICJ case make-or-break for whales in the Southern
Ocean.
"We
are still preparing to head down regardless [of the ICJ's decision]," said
Jeff Hansen, the organisation's director. Sea Shepherd spends about £2.4m annually
on its anti-whaling campaigns.
John
Frizell of Greenpeace said a decision in favour of Australia "would place
Japan in a very difficult position and present great difficulties for its
operation in the Antarctic".
If the
court rules in Japan's favour, however, "they will feel vindicated and
free to continue their operations, which are becoming increasingly
controversial", he said.
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