| WWF
Urges Iceland Not to
Resume Whaling
Reuters
News Services
Posted April 4, 2003
GENEVA
(Reuters) - The World Wide Fund for Nature urged Iceland on
Thursday to abandon plans to resume hunting whales for scientific
research, saying it was just a cover for the commercial exploitation
of endangered species.
Despite decades of protection, seven of the world's 13 great
whale species remain at risk, including the Fin and Sei whales
which Iceland is seeking to catch, according to the Swiss-based
conservation group.
Iceland,
which has not hunted the marine mammals since 1989, said last
month that it would apply to the International Whaling Commission
to catch 250 large whales each year for research.
The
commission, which requires members to present detailed research
plans before such permits are granted, will discuss the request
at its annual meeting in June.
There
is a long-term moratorium in force on all commercial whaling.
In
a statement, WWF condemned Iceland's announcement saying that
there was no scientific need for it and that the real aim
was to sell whale meat.
"This
is a needless proposal based on a lack of scientific necessity
or legitimacy," said Dr Susan Lieberman, director of
WWF's species program. "If this whaling goes ahead it
is clear it is for commercial purposes."
WWF
said that Iceland had made clear its real intentions when
Fisheries Minister Arni Matthiesen said that Iceland was seeking
an agreement with Japan for the export of those parts of the
whale catch not needed for research.
Iceland
refused to sign up to the 1986 commercial whaling moratorium
and stormed out of the IWC a decade ago over the ban. But
it stopped whaling in 1989 amid international pressure and
rejoined the IWC last October.
Reuters
News Services
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