Yahoo – AFP,
Shigemi Sato, 15 May 2014
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Sarah Lucas
(L), founder of Australia for Dolphins, and US dolphin activist
Ric O'Barry,
who appeared in the Academy-award winning documentary
"The Cove",
speak to the press in Tokyo on May 15, 2014
|
Animal
rights activists said Thursday they had sued a major Japanese whaling town
internationally condemned for its dolphin hunts for banning
"foreign-looking" visitors from its whale museum.
Sarah
Lucas, head of "Australia for Dolphins," filed a lawsuit on Tuesday
at the regional court of Wakayama, western Japan, where the town of Taiji is
located, demanding an end to "discrimination based on race" and about
seven million yen ($69,000) in damages, she told a news conference.
The
activist said she visited the museum in February to check on the condition of
an extremely rare albino dolphin calf, named Angel by her group, which was
caught in January and has been kept in a "cramped, abusive show
tank."
But a
ticket officer turned her away by with a sign in English that read:
"Please note that anti-whalers are not allowed to enter the museum."
Lucas added
she knew other foreigners who had been given the same treatment.
"The
museum has not allowed law-abiding people, who wished to see Angel, to enter
and turned some people away purely on their appearance," she said, calling
the act a violation of the Japanese constitution which bans discrimination
based on race.
Ric O'Barry,
an advocate for the protection of dolphins worldwide who appeared in the
Academy-award winning documentary "The Cove", which focused on the
town's whaling, said the action "ramps up the pressure on the Taiji
government to bring an end to these inhumane hunts once and for all."
Long
history of hunting
The 2009
movie graphically documented the dolphin culling in Taiji, arousing
international condemnation, with a number of foreign activists including
members of the international environmentalist group Sea Shepherd based there to
protest the culling.
The town
has depended on coastal whaling for four centuries, and local fishermen also
corral hundreds of dolphins into a secluded bay to kill them for meat or sell
them to aquariums and dolphinariums.
The annual
dolphin catch sparked renewed global criticism after newly arrived US
ambassador to Japan Caroline Kennedy tweeted her concern earlier in January at
the "inhumaneness" of the hunt.
O'Barry, an
American who found fame first in the 1960s for catching and training five
dolphins for the well-known TV series "Flipper", has latterly fought
against keeping the mammals in captivity, and said: "Angel is living in
hell."
"This
one small dolphin has become a global representative of the thousands of
dolphins slaughtered and captured each year in Taiji."
Lucas said
there are a number of people who have been refused entrance and can provide
evidence to the lawsuit, but did not say exactly how many.
But the
museum's director, Katsuki Hayashi, told AFP by telephone: "We have no
intentions to discriminate against anyone with the sign."
"We
aim to protect the town's culture, assets and fishery," he said. "We
welcome (foreigners) who are clearly tourists."
Defenders
of the hunt say it is a tradition and point out that the animals it targets are
not endangered, a position echoed by the Japanese government.
They say
Western objections are hypocritical and ignore the vastly larger number of
cows, pigs and sheep butchered to satisfy demand elsewhere.

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