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| Japan is a signatory to the International Whaling Commission moratorium on hunting, but exploits a loophole that allows whales to be killed for scientific research |
Japanese
whaling vessels returned to port on Saturday after catching more than 300 of
the mammals in the Antarctic Ocean without facing any protests by anti-whaling groups,
officials said.
A fleet of
five whalers set sail for the Southern Ocean in November, as Tokyo pursues its
"research whaling" in defiance of global criticism.
Three of
the vessels, including the fleet's main ship, the Nisshin Maru, arrived in the
morning at Shimonoseki port in western Japan, a port official said.
The fleet
caught 333 minke whales as planned without any interruption by anti-whaling
campaigners, the Fisheries Agency said in a statement.
Japanese
whalers have in the past clashed at sea with animal rights campaigners,
particularly the Sea Shepherd activist group, which last year announced it had
no plan to make offshore protests this season.
Japan is a
signatory to the International Whaling Commission moratorium on hunting, but
exploits a loophole that allows whales to be killed for scientific research.
Tokyo says
the slaughter is necessary for in-depth knowledge of whale behaviour and
biology, but it makes no secret of the fact that whales killed in the hunts
often end up on dinner plates.

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