Yahoo – AFP,
6 Jan 2015
Japanese
whalers will set out for the Antarctic this week, but will leave their harpoons
at home after the United Nations' top court last year ruled their annual hunt
was illegal, the government said Tuesday.
The
Japanese Fisheries Agency said the Institute of Cetacean Research plans to
conduct non-lethal research on whales until March 28.
As the
research does not involve catching whales, harpoons have been removed from the
vessels, the agency said.
Two boats,
which will set sail on Thursday, will carry out "sighting surveys"
and take skin samples from the huge marine mammals. A third boat will sail in
support.
The
International Court of Justice -- the highest court of the United Nations --
ruled in March that Tokyo was abusing a scientific exemption set out in the
1986 moratorium on whaling, and was carrying out a commercial hunt under a
veneer of research.
After the
ruling, Japan has said it would cancel this winter's Antarctic mission.
But Tokyo
has also expressed its intention to resume "research whaling" in
2015-16.
In a new
plan submitted to the International Whaling Commission (IWC) and its Scientific
Committee, Japan set an annual target of 333 minke whales for future hunts,
down from some 900 under the previous programme.
Tokyo also
defined the research period as 12 years from fiscal 2015 in response to the
court's criticism of the programme's open-ended nature.
Japan
killed 251 minke whales in the Antarctic in the 2013-14 season and 103 the
previous year, far below its target because of direct action by conservationist
group Sea Shepherd.
Tokyo also
conducts hunts in the name of science in the Northwest Pacific, where it killed
132 whales in 2013, and off the Japanese coast, where it caught 92.
Despite
widespread international opprobrium, Japan has continued to hunt whales using
the scientific exemption, although it makes no secret of the fact that the meat
from the creatures caught by taxpayer-funded ships ends up on dinner tables.

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