Originally published November 18, 2008 at 12:00 AM | Page modified November 18, 2008 at 12:59 PM
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Japanese whalers set sail on hunt
The mother ship in Japan's whaling fleet left Monday for the country's annual hunt in the Antarctic, the environmental group Greenpeace said, as anti-whaling activists vowed to disrupt the expedition once again after high-seas clashes forced an early halt last year.
The Associated Press
TOKYO — The mother ship in Japan's whaling fleet left Monday for the country's annual hunt in the Antarctic, the environmental group Greenpeace said, as anti-whaling activists vowed to disrupt the expedition once again after high-seas clashes forced an early halt last year.
Government officials declined to confirm the departure of the Nisshin Maru, hoping to avoid protests.
The ship left the port of Innoshima near Hiroshima on Monday afternoon under tight security, Greenpeace said. The rest of the fleet is expected to leave from another port this month.
Japanese whalers plan to catch up to 935 minke whales and 50 fin whales. Officials say there will be no changes to their hunting plans despite international protests and slumping demand for whale meat at home.
Japan kills about 1,200 whales a year in two hunting expeditions under a scientific program that Tokyo says provides crucial data on populations, feeding habits and distribution of the mammals in the seas near Antarctica and the northwestern Pacific Ocean.
Fisheries Agency official Toshinori Uoya said whale hunts are able to obtain data that cannot be collected through nonlethal research, which Japan also conducts.
Japan's research hunts are allowed by the International Whaling Commission, but opponents call them a cover for commercial whaling, banned in 1986.
Australia announced Monday that it will invest $3.87 million in nonlethal whale research to show Japan that the animals do not need to be killed to be studied. The campaign will involve aerial surveys, satellite tags and genetic studies.
"Australia does not believe that we need to kill whales to understand them," Environment Minister Peter Garrett said.
Last season, a Japanese whaling ship and a vessel owned by the animal-rights group Sea Shepherd collided twice in Antarctic waters. The group's activists also dumped a foul-smelling acid on another whaling boat, slightly injuring two crew members.
Because of the disruptions, the fleet was forced to return early with 551 minke whales, slightly more than half of the planned catch. Sea Shepherd said it plans to disrupt the hunt again this season.
Japanese have caught whales for centuries, and their meat was widely eaten in the lean years after World War II. However, it has plunged in popularity in today's prosperous Japan. While still on the menu in a few upscale Tokyo restaurants, its consumption is largely limited to small coastal communities.
Japan says commercial whaling should be allowed to resume for nonendangered species such as minkes.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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