Whaling Commission (IWC) and bribery allegations seem to have been floating
around forever.
and now want to see IWC voting rules changed so that it won’t take as many
threats and bribes to get its way and recommence large-scale commercial whaling.
meeting of the International Whaling Commission in September as a ruling
party endorsed the government plan on Tuesday.
abundant such as minke whales for the proposal, but it remains uncertain
whether it can secure support from members of the IWC that are split over
whaling.
calls from some government officials and ruling party lawmakers that Japan
should weigh withdrawal from the IWC.
nature of the international body, with one ruling party source saying, "We
are not going to drag this out."
government representative Joji Morishita, Japan plans to make a packaged
proposal that also calls for easing of the IWC's decision-making rules, a plan
seen as a tactic to court anti-whaling members.
needed to set a catch quota or a sanctuary where whaling is banned.
The Japanese proposal is to lower the hurdle to a simple majority.
to secure support for designating a new whale sanctuary.
against the practice, according to Japan's Fisheries Agency.
established in 1948. In 1982, it declared there should be a moratorium on
commercial whaling and the ban came into force in 1986.
continues to hunt whales for "research purposes," drawing criticism
overseas that the practice is a cover for commercial whaling.
quota for species whose stocks are recognised as healthy by the IWC
scientific committee", Hideki Moronuki, an official in charge of whaling at
Japan's fisheries agency, told AFP.
how many mammals Japan wants to hunt, but he said the IWC classifies
several species as no longer depleted.
attempts to win a partial lifting have been unsuccessful.
process, lowering the threshold for proposals to pass from three quarters
of members to half.
cooperative system," Moronuki said.
loophole allowing "scientific research". It says the research is necessary to prove whale populations are large enough to sustain a return to commercial
hunting.
when the country was desperately poor, but most Japanese now say they
rarely or never eat whale.
of conservative activists and politicians.
said permits being issued by Tokyo were "not for purposes of scientific
research".
year after Japan reported it had caught 333 minkes on its latest expedition,
122 of which were pregnant.
of the minke population.
down its request to hunt 17 minke whales in its coastal waters—where
smaller whales which Japan claims are not regulated by the committee are
already hunted.
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