Announcement
comes after campaigners shamed company over issue and international court
banned Southern Ocean hunt
theguardian.com,
Justin McCurry in Osaka, Friday 4 April 2014
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| Japanese whalers with a minke whale in 2009. Photograph: AP |
The
Japanese online retailer Rakuten is to end all online sales of whale and
dolphin meat by the end of April after the international court of justice
ordered Japan to immediately halt its annual whale hunts in the southern ocean.
The
decision by Rakuten comes soon after the UK-based Environmental Investigation
Agency (EIA) exposed the company as the world’s biggest online retailer of whale products and elephant ivory.
Rakuten
said it had asked sellers to cancel sales of whale meat products on its website
“in accordance” with the ICJ ruling. Monday’s verdict in the Hague, however,
did not cover whale meat sales in Japan, which are legal, or the country’s
slaughter of a smaller number of whales in the north-west Pacific and in its
own coastal waters.
Clare
Perry, an EIA senior campaigner, said: “The removal of thousands of ads for
whale products is a very welcome step and a clear recognition by Rakuten that
selling the meat of endangered and protected whales and dolphins is seriously
harmful to both its global reputation and customers’ health." In its BloodE-Commerce report [PDF] the conservation group said tests had revealed that
some cetacean products advertised by Rakuten contained levels of mercury up to
20 times higher than the Japanese regulatory limit.
Rakuten’s
acquisitions include Buy.com (now Rakuten Shopping) in the US and Play.com in
the UK. It owns the Canadian e-book reader Kobo and is a major shareholder in
Pinterest. “Rakuten, which has expanded its global presence in recent years,
has also requested these merchants to remove all related items from their
online shops within the next 30 days,” the firm said.
Monday’s
ICJ ruling, in support of a four-year legal campaign by the Australian
government, this week prompted Japanese authorities to call off next winter’s whale hunt in the Antarctic.
It is the
first time the Antarctic hunt, during which harpoon vessels target almost 1,000
mainly minke whales, has been cancelled in more than a quarter of a century.
Japan
launched its “scientific” whaling programme after the International Whaling
Commission banned commercial whaling in 1986.
But on
Monday a majority of judges at the UN court agreed with Australian claims that
Japan had failed to demonstrate that the slaughter was of any scientific value.
Until
recently Rakuten's website carried more than 28,000 advertisements for elephant
ivory and 1,200 for whale products, according to the EIA and the Humane Society
International.
Many of the
whale products originated from species that have been protected since the 1986
moratorium. Rakuten’s sales ban covers not only the mammals’ meat but also
skin, bone and other products.
Campaigners
said they now expected the online retailer to add ivory to its list of banned
products. “Japan is awash with illegal ivory trade and Rakuten's thousands of
ivory ads help fuel the mass slaughter of elephants across Africa,” said Allan
Thornton, the EIA president. “We appeal to Rakuten to help protect elephants by
immediately banning all ads for ivory products.”
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