Yahoo – AFP,
Miwa Suzuki, 9 June 2014
![]() |
Japanese
Agriculture Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi (2nd R) eats whale meat
with Japanese
lawmakers at his ministry in Tokyo on June 9, 2014 (AFP Photo/
Yoshikazu Tsuno)
|
Japanese
Agriculture Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi (2nd R) eats whale meat with Japanese
lawmakers at his ministry in Tokyo on June 9, 2014
Tokyo (AFP)
- Japan's prime minister told parliament Monday he would boost his efforts
toward restarting commercial whaling, despite a top UN court's order that Tokyo
must stop killing whales in the Antarctic.
Shinzo
Abe's comments put him firmly on a collision course with anti-whaling groups,
who had hoped the ruling by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) would
herald the beginning of the end for the mammal hunt.
![]() |
| Map showing Japan's whaling bases (AFP Photo) |
"To
that end, I will step up efforts further to get understanding from the
international community," he said.
Abe said
that in contrast to the foreign perception that whaling communities mercilessly
exploit the giant mammals, whaling towns appreciate the meat and show respect to
the creatures with religious services at the end of every hunting season.
"It it
regrettable that this part of Japanese culture is not understood," Abe
said.
Japan has
hunted whales under a loophole in the 1986 global moratorium, which allows
lethal research on the mammals, but it has made no secret of the fact that
their meat ends up in restaurants and on fish markets.
The annual
hunt in the Southern Ocean has proved particularly controversial, with
sometimes violent confrontations between whalers and protestors.
Australia,
backed by New Zealand, hauled Japan before the ICJ in 2010 in a bid to stop the
yearly campaign.
The court
slammed the hunt, which it said was a commercial venture masquerading as
research.
Tokyo
called off its 2014-15 Antarctic season, and said it would redesign the mission
in a bid to make it more scientific.
A separate
hunt in the northwest Pacific continues, as do hunts in coastal waters which
are not covered by the moratorium.
Since the
ICJ ruling, Japanese e-commerce marketplace Rakuten has told online retailers
they cannot sell whale and dolphin meat through its site.
But dealing
in whale meat "does not violate international or domestic laws in any
way", said Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi.
Hayashi
told the same parliamentary committee that Rakuten had made a commercial
decision as a private company, but that the increasing number of companies that
are refusing to sell whale meat is "regrettable".
![]() |
Photo taken
by Japan's Institute of Cetacean Research in 2013 shows a Bryde's
whale on the
deck of a whaling ship in the Western North Pacific (AFP Photo/Institute
of
Cetacean Research)
|
Inviting
people to dine on whale in his ministry, he said a "whale week"
campaign, which began Monday, was part of efforts to let Japanese people know
that whaling and eating whale meat are part of their culture.
Whales were
once a key source of fuel and food, but Japan's consumption of the meat has
considerably diminished in recent decades and it is no longer a regular part of
most people's diet.
However,
powerful lobbying forces have ensured the continued subsidisation of the hunt
with taxpayer money.
Tokyo has
always maintained it was trying to prove whale populations were big enough to
sustain commercial hunts.



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