Yahoo – AFP,
September 11, 2015
Japanese fishermen on Friday killed the first dolphins of the season in a controversial annual hunt that attracted global attention after it was featured in the Oscar-winning 2009 documentary "The Cove".
![]() |
During the
six-month hunt, people from the southwestern town of Taiji corral
hundreds of
dolphins into a secluded bay and butcher them, turning the water
crimson red
(AFP Photo/Toshifumi Kitamura)
|
Japanese fishermen on Friday killed the first dolphins of the season in a controversial annual hunt that attracted global attention after it was featured in the Oscar-winning 2009 documentary "The Cove".
An official
with the local fishing union in the small town of Taiji said boats left early
Friday morning and trapped a dozen dolphins.
"They
have already been killed," he added.
During the
six-month hunt, people from the southwestern town corral hundreds of the
mammals into a secluded bay and butcher them, turning the water crimson red.
![]() |
Two Risso's
dolphins being herded by fishing
boats near the village of Taiji, in Wakayama
prefecture, western Japan (AFP Photo/Ryan
Nakashima)
|
Environmental
campaigners visit the town every year to watch the gruesome event and
authorities have boosted their presence to prevent any clashes between locals
and activists.
But the
Taiji officials said only about half a dozen activists were there to see the
killing and there were no altercations.
"It
was quiet this year," he added.
Activists
from the group Sea Shepherd criticised the hunt online.
"Now
in Taiji, Japan: a pod of 10-15 Risso's dolphins is being slaughtered in the
cove," the group said on its Facebook page.
The town
kicked off its hunt last week, but bad weather hampered efforts to trap the
dolphins, officials said earlier.
Defenders
of the hunt say it is a tradition and point out that the animals are not
endangered, a position echoed by the Japanese government.
Some of the
dolphins are sold to aquariums.
Increasing
the pressure on Japan, the World Association of Zoos and Aquariums (WAZA)
suspended its Japanese chapter in April for using dolphins caught in Taiji.
The
Japanese chapter later decided to stop buying dolphins from Taiji.
Last week,
Taiji's official website was hacked into, leaving it temporarily inaccessible.
Anonymous,
a loosely connected hacking collective, has listed 21 Japanese government
websites as targets for cyber-attacks as part of a bid to end the annual hunt.



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