Yahoo – AFP, 16 April 2014
Japanese
lawmakers on Wednesday demanded the government redesign its
"research" whaling programme to circumvent an international court
ruling that described the programme as a commercial hunt dressed up as science.
The
40-strong fisheries committee, made up of a cross-section of members of the
lower house, unanimously passed a resolution urging the administration study
"all sorts of options, including walking out of the (international
whaling) convention".
It said the
ruling earlier this month by the International Court of Justice was "truly
regrettable" but "does not necessarily prevent Japan's whaling, which
is a unique tradition and culture".
The panel
demanded the government find a way to continue the research operation "so
as to play a responsible role as the only country in the world with a
scientific approach".
The
parliamentarians also demanded the government swiftly draw up a plan to replace
the banned Antarctic whaling operation and fully prepare for a new programme
while circulating "whale meat -- a by-product of research whaling --
appropriately as before".
Although it
is a signatory to the International Whaling Convention (IWC), which bans the
commercial hunting of the mammals, Japan has used a loophole that allows for
"lethal research".
It said it
was perfectly proper for people to consume the meat that was the inevitable
by-product of the killing.
Environmentalists
have maintained the science is a figleaf. Australia hauled Japan before the ICJ
in The Hague over its programme.
Judges
there ruled 12-4 in Canberra's favour and Tokyo said it was calling the 2014-15
hunt off.
But legal
papers submitted in the United States reportedly showed the Institute for
Cetacean Research, the body in Japan that carries out the whaling programme,
intends to return to the Southern Ocean the following year with a redesigned
scheme.
Japan on
Monday insisted it had made no decision on whether to resume its Antarctic
whaling.
Tokyo is
also studying whether it should go ahead with another research whaling
programme in the northwestern Pacific, to which the fleet was originally
scheduled to sail later this month.
This hunt,
which is not affected by the court ruling, operates two excursions a year, in
coastal waters and offshore, from early summer through autumn.
Amid the
deliberation, the whaling industry invited lawmakers to an annual buffet of all
manner of whale meat on Tuesday, including sashimi.
Takashi
Tanuma, a member of the Japan Restoration Party, tweeted from there: "(The
whaling industry) argue the international ruling only applies to the Southern
Ocean programme, but the government may expand it to operations in other regions,
which must not be accepted."

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