Sea
Shepherd and the Whales
The
2005 and 2006 Campaign
to
Defend the Whales
Sea Shepherd Conservation
Society is currently
making preparations
to engage the Japanese
whaling fleet in December
2005 and in January
2006 in the Southern
Ocean Whale Sanctuary.
This is our priority
campaign for the year,
and we are investing
a great deal of time
and resources to this
campaign
The campaign will
begin in December
when our flagship
the Farley Mowat
will depart from Melbourne,
Australia, on a course
south to the coast
of Antarctica. Our
objective will be
to hunt down the Japanese
whaling fleet and
harrass, block, obstruct,
and intervene against
their illegal whaling
operations.
This will be our
second attempt at
searching for this
fleet. The lesson
we learned from our
first attempt is that
to be successful,
we require aerial
surveillance. This
year we intend have
air power and that
is one of the priority
goals for The
Sea Sheaperds fundraising
efforts.
The Japanese whale
kill is illegal and
we will be acting
in accordance with
the United Nations
World Charter for
Nature in our intervention.
The Japanese are
violating the Southern
Ocean Sanctuary. They
are violating the
International
Whaling Commission
(IWC) moratorium on
commercial whaling.
They are targeting
endangered fin and
humpback whales that
are protected under
the Convention
on the Trade in Endangered
Species of Flora and
Fauna. (CITES).
The Japanese are also
in violation of the
Australian laws protecting
the Australian Antarctic
Territorial waters.
Sea Shepherd is not
going to the water
of Antarctica to protest
whaling. We are going
there to intervene
with the purpose of
upholding international
laws protecting the
whales.
Are
Whales in Danger of
Extinction?
The Japanese claim
on their website that
their whale "research"
does not pose any
risk to the current
status of whale populations.
This is, of course,
not true. The Atlantic
gray whale was exterminated
by whalers, both the
Eastern and Western
populations. In the
Pacific, the Western
populations of grays
have been reduced
to only a few hundred.
The Eastern population
has recovered since
1911 when it was reduced
to less than 1,000
animals.
It was whaling that
has placed the blue,
fin, humpback, bowhead,
sperm, and right whales
on the Endangered
Species List.
Now, Japan is targeting
whales that are still
listed as endangered.
But whaling is not
the only threat to
the survival of the
whales. Reduction
in plankton populations
in the Southern Oceans
from ozone depletion
and global warming
is a significant factor.
Pollution and collisions
with ships are other
major factors.
It is the position
of Sea Shepherd Conservation
Society that all whaling
activity should be
abolished and that
international conservation
laws be enforced to
prevent further predation
by outlaw whaling
nations like Japan,
Iceland, and Norway.
Please
support
Sea Sheapords efforts
to save whales — we
turn your support
into action!
