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1/26/04
Taiji Cold-Heartedly Kills Pseudo Orca Whales
In the early morning hours of Sunday, January 25, 2004, the
cold-hearted and cowardly butchers of Taiji, Japan killed between
seven and ten Pseudo Orca Whales. No mercy was given to the two
newborns of the pod.
And why would these whalers extend any sort of compassion to
the lives they see as nothing more than profit? They don't. Such
a lack of any morsel of compassion is clearly evidenced by the
fact that as this pod was being hacked to pieces and thoughtlessly
tossed into piles, across the harbor once wild and majestic dolphins
float listlessly in tight confinement awaiting their final journey
to a life of captivity in Hong Kong aquariums.
Any human with something remotely resembling a conscience who
has looked into the inquisitive and self-aware eyes of a dolphin
or whale could never unleash such mind-numbing violence on these
beings.
But in Taiji, Japan we will find no compassion, no empathy,
no pause for consideration of the lives that are callously wiped
from the face of this planet. For a bloody business that exists
solely for profit, we will find only the profiteers' lies and
excuses that seek to beguile the uninformed public and media.
In October of 2003 when our Sea Shepherd crew first
arrived in Taiji, we exposed the bloody "dolphin drives"
internationally and brought fierce opposition to the hunts that
had never before been experienced by the town.
We were initially told by the whalers and their supporters
that the kills were nothing more than business-that we were being
sentimental. It was stated over and over again that the drives
were necessary for the economy and that we were seeking to drive
the town into poverty. This argument held no weight and garnered
the whalers no sympathy.
As a result, with the next kill and subsequent wave of international
media attention, the whalers altered their game and began running
the rhetoric that the "dolphin drives" were an intrinsic
part of Taiji's tradition and culture. They began claiming historical
privilege and erroneously asserting that they'd been 'collecting'
dolphins for thousands upon thousands of years in Taiji.
Our field crew leader provided evidence to the contrary, and
overnight, the history of Taiji's "dolphin drives" changed
from thousands of years to a couple hundred.
Today, the rhetoric that is spewing out of Taiji is one that
is heard around the world in every conflict between ocean conservationists
and those who profit from the pillaging of the oceans. The opportunistic
killers of Taiji, whom we've caught dumping their trash and oil
into the coastal waters, now assert that they are the stewards
of the oceans, charged with managing marine resources by the Japanese
government.
If it weren't for the fact that these men routinely slaughter
thousands of dolphins and whales every year, many of who are newborns,
this ridiculous assertion would be wholly laughable. But somehow,
straight-faced, representatives of Taiji's whaling cooperative
now claim that they make little money off of the "dolphin
drives" and are instead paid by the Japanese government to
serve as an oceanic "pest control" agency.*
In a conversation yesterday with One Voice campaigner Ric O'Barry,
the whalers asserted that they kill dolphins for neither money
nor culture, but for the health of the oceans and to preserve
declining fish populations as requested by the government.
O'Barry offered to pay the whalers whatever they make in a
season if they would only refrain from killing next year
they promptly declined the offer. Apparently in the last two months
their duty has shifted from making money to preserving their culture
and now to preserving fish populations. Just how killing infants,
the next generation of whales and dolphins, maintains the health
of the oceans remains to be seen.
The only thing that should be plainly clear is that the dolphin-killers
of Taiji have no sound rationalization for what goes on in that
town. They are merely seeking justification for a practice that
has no justification in the 21st century.
Call the Wakayama Prefecture Government and the Cooperative
in Taiji and tell them you don't buy the lie!
The dolphin round-up in Taiji is conducted by Taiji Fishery
Cooperative and is granted by the governor of Wakayama prefecture.
- Taiji Fishery Cooperative
3167-7 Taiji
Wakayama, 649-5171 Japan
Tel: +81.735.59.3517 Fax: +81 735 59 3018
Email: jf-taiji@rowan.cypress.ne.jp
- Mr. Yoshiki Kimura, the governor of Wakayama
Prefectural Office of Wakayama
1-1 Komatsubaradouri, Wakayama-shi
Wakayama-ken, 640-8269 Japan
Tel: +81-73-441-2034 Fax:+81-73-423-9500
email: e0006001@pref.wakayama.lg.jp
* This is essentially the same defense raised
by the Newfoundland sealers for their practice of bludgeoning
harp seal pups. Ironically, both the local police and Taiji whaling
cooperative regularly monitor the SSCS website and upcoming campaigns;
one of which happens to be the seal campaign. While in Taiji,
our crew found it odd that the police and whalers would be keeping
files about the seal campaign; coincidentally or not, we now find
the same defense of declining fish stocks being used in Taiji.
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