| 11/08/2006 10:20:49 AM
As this drive hunt season commences as one of the
bloodiest on record in recent years, WDCS is on the ground in Taiji, Japan,
documenting these hunts and meeting with government and aquarium industry
officials to encourage an end to these cruel and unnecessary hunts. Campaigner
Courtney Vail of WDCS and filmmaker Hardy Jones of Bluevoice.org, together with
Sakae Hemmi of Elsa Nature Conservancy, are providing accounts from the field as
these hunts ensue. On the morning of Wednesday 8th November,
eyewitness accounts report the slaughter of fourteen pilot whales, captured two
days previously and held in the bay in Taiji. The deaths of these unfortunate
animals only add to the approximately 150 bottlenose and 50 Risso’s dolphins, 25
false killer whales and 75 other pilot whales that were slaughtered in the space
of only one week in Taiji this drive hunt season. In addition, over 30 have been
selected to send to aquariums in Japan for display to the public.
WDCS condemns these continued dolphin slaughters in Taiji, one of
only two towns in Japan still conducting drive hunts, and renews its call for an
end to these cruel hunts. The hunts started a month early this season, and WDCS
speculates that hunts commenced in September in order to gain an extra few weeks
to fulfill its large dolphin quota. Up to 2,380 small whales and dolphins may be
killed in Taiji’s hunts, which normally run between October and April, including
bottlenose, striped, and Risso’s dolphins, and pilot whales and false killer
whales. In these hunts, groups of dolphins are rounded up by
speedboats at sea and herded into a bay or harbour, where they are surrounded by
nets and then slaughtered, or selected alive for trade in the lucrative aquarium
industry. In April of this year, WDCS released its report, Driven by Demand,
downloadable from the pdf file below, detailing the involvement of aquariums in
these brutal hunts. Dolphins are highly intelligent and
socially-complex animals. Sentient and aware, these animals exhibit signs of
great distress during their capture, round-up and prolonged
slaughter. “The methods and manner of slaughter employed in these
drive hunts is almost unspeakable. These dolphins face intense suffering
as they are violently herded from the open ocean to near exhaustion, and then
held in confinement until their throats are cut, taking sometimes several
minutes to die. This is a brutal practice that has no place in a civilized
society,“ said Courtney S. Vail, North American campaigns officer.
You
can download a copy of the WDCS report 'Driven by Demand' here: 
This file is a PDF file. You will
need Adobe
Acrobat Reader (free download) to view this file.
Source: WDCS
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