Dolphin hunt goes on in Japan town despite protests - FaunaClassifieds
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SOUND OFF!!! Ever have something REALLY bugging you and nowhere to vent about it? Well, this is the place. It does not have to be fauna oriented at all! Get it off your chest right here.

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Old 10-12-2010, 11:05 AM   #1
SamanthaJane13
Unhappy Dolphin hunt goes on in Japan town despite protests

TOKYO (Reuters Life!) – Fishermen at the Japanese town made famous by the controversial Oscar-winning documentary "The Cove" shrugged off protests by animal rights activists on Tuesday to carry out their grisly annual dolphin hunt.

Japanese broadcaster TBS said the first hunt of the season in the town of Taiji took place on Tuesday, without mentioning how many dolphins were involved.

But Sea Shepherd, one of several animal rights groups that have been monitoring fishermen in Taiji since the season began in September, said in a report dated October 11 on its website that they witnessed the second killing of dolphins this season on Tuesday.

They said 14 dolphins were killed, while another six -- mothers and calves -- were spared, at least temporarily.

"Mama dolphin, baby dolphin. No," chanted several Western activists shown by TBS standing near the ocean.

TBS also showed one activist, identified on the Sea Shepherd website as Steve Thompson of the Taiji Dolphin Action Group, raising his voice to fishermen about to leave for the hunt at 5 in the morning.

"Today. No fishing. There is baby dolphin, pregnant dolphin. If you take them, that is wrong," said Thompson in broken Japanese before being led away by police, who TBS said were there to prevent the protests from turning violent.

Taiji shot to global infamy after the release of The Cove, which was directed by former National Geographic photographer Louis Psihoyos and follows eco-activists who struggle with Japanese police and fishermen to gain access to the secluded cove where the hunt takes place.

The movie has met with fierce opposition in Japan from groups who say it is "anti-Japanese" and an affront to traditional culture. Its Japanese opening in July was greeted with shouting protests from flag-waving demonstrators and a scuffle.

Japan has long maintained that killing and eating whale is a cherished culinary tradition, and conducts annual hunts under the name of research whaling.

It says that killing dolphins is not banned under any international treaty and that the animals are not endangered, adding that dolphins need to be culled to protect fishing grounds.

(Editing by Elaine Lies and Steve Addison)


http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20101012/...BoaW5odW50Zw--
 
Old 10-12-2010, 11:10 AM   #2
SamanthaJane13
Japanese village kills dolphins but frees young
By YURI KAGEYAMA, Associated Press Writer Yuri Kageyama, Associated Press Writer – 2 hrs 3 mins ago

TOKYO – The Japanese village notorious for the dolphin hunt documented in the film "The Cove" has slaughtered a pod of dolphins but spared the youngest animals, activists said Tuesday.

Most of the dolphins caught by residents of the seaside village of Taiji on Monday were butchered Tuesday, except for two that will be sold to aquariums and six young animals that were released into the ocean, said Scott West, a member of the Sea Shepherd conservation group who is in Taiji as part of a campaign to protect the marine mammals.

Leilani Munter, an environmental activist visiting Taiji from Charlotte, North Carolina, also witnessed the hunt and saw the dolphins being cut up in the slaugherhouse.

"There is nothing to prepare you for seeing it in person. I saw these beautiful dolphins being driven into the cove, and they came out dead bodies," she told The Associated Press.

For years, Taiji has held an annual dolphin hunt which begins in September and continues through March. It has traditionally sold the best-looking ones to aquariums and killed the rest.

But the Oscar-winning documentary — which showed how herded dolphins were stabbed in a cove that turned red with blood — has intensified international opposition to the slaughter.

Activists are organizing a protest Thursday at Japanese embassies around the world against the killings.

Unlike previous years, Taiji has been setting some of the captured dolphins free, probably because of the growing pressure, West said.

The village also has not killed any bottlenose dolphins, the same species as "Flipper" in the 1960s U.S. TV show. Instead, the victims have been risso dolphins and pilot whales, which are also dolphins but don't have the distinctive pointed noses of bottlenoses, West said.

No bottlenose dolphins were caught Monday, he said.

Last month, Taiji fishermen captured about a dozen bottlenose dolphins, which are still swimming in a netted area in a harbor separate from the cove.

A European conservationist group, Black Fish, said it cut nets in that harbor last month but the dolphins did not escape.

The young dolphins released Tuesday appeared confused, perhaps looking for their parents, and it was unclear how well they will survive, West said.

The Taiji fishing spokesman was not available for comment.

Town officials have repeatedly defended the slaughter as a way to make a living in an area where the rocky landscape makes farming and livestock-raising difficult.

The town has also been trying to draw tourists to see its aquariums, where visitors can play with captive dolphins.

The Japanese government allows about 20,000 dolphins to be caught each year, and defends the hunts as traditional and argues that killing dolphins and whales is no different from raising cows or pigs for slaughter.

Most Japanese have never eaten dolphin meat and would find the idea unappetizing.

In addition to opposing the Taiji hunt, Sea Shepherd has also harassed Japanese whaling ships.

West said Sea Shepherd offered to buy the captured dolphins from Taiji fishermen, raising money through global donations, but that was rejected.

___

Online:

http://www.thecovemovie.com/


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101012/...FuZXNldmlsbA--
 
Old 10-15-2010, 08:59 AM   #3
Earthworks
lol "FAWKAYOU DOLPHIN AND WHALE!!!" -southpark

in all seriousness though, pretty meaningless killing of a highly intelligent species known for saving and befriending our own sometimes pathetic species...
 
Old 10-15-2010, 03:34 PM   #4
AbsoluteApril
that is so sad.

Just watched The Cove a couple weeks ago, very moving and important movie.. not overly gory, people need to see it!
 
Old 10-15-2010, 06:52 PM   #5
Wolfy-hound
Sorry, but to most of the people there, hunting dolphins is no different than whitetail deer hunting to us. The animals are not endangered, so they technically are not protected.

Would you support Japanese people coming to America and demanding that no Americans can hunt elk? Or Indian people coming to the US and demanding that we not eat beef because they find cows sacred?
 
Old 10-15-2010, 07:07 PM   #6
AbsoluteApril
it's not the killing of them that bothers me, it's the INHUMANE way it is done.
 
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