11/25/03
Agence France Presse Report on Taiji
More dolphins arrive in Japan after anti-hunt protesters
By RYAN NAKASHIMA
TAIJI, Japan, Nov 23
Thirteen fishing boats herded a pod of Risso's
dolphins into this small central Japanese town Sunday, their seventh
haul this year in a centuries-old tradition ruffled recently by
the strongest conservationist protests locals say they have ever
seen.
The dolphins were moved into coves and enclosed by nets to
keep them alive overnight before their slaughter due Monday.
The hunt is a way of life for some in this coastal town of
4,000 inhabitants, but locals are rattled by the vigor with which
a conservationist group has them brought under global scrutiny
to highlight the plight of the animals.
In early October the environmental group, Sea Shepherd Conservation
Society, posted pictures on the Internet showing the slaughter
of 91 dolphins in a blood-red bay at Taiji.
The pictures appeared in newspapers and Internet sites around
the world.
And last week two members of the group were arrested for cutting
a dolphin-encasing net. The group, which calls the dolphin-hunting
"horrifically cruel" and intended to gain meat for what
is essentially a luxury item in Japan, has warned of more protests.
Citizens of the self-dubbed "Town of Whales" Sunday
called the protesters culturally and historically ignorant and
an affront to whalers and dolphin hunters whose incomes funded
most of the town's budget some four decades ago.
"Everyone's livelihood depends on this," said a woman
in her 50s, whose husband and son helped bring in the haul. "We
have been doing this for hundreds of years."
Taiji's quota of 2,900 dolphins, among the nation's annual
take of some 22,000, is among the largest in the nation, according
to Japanese Fisheries Agency officials.
The standoff between the town and conservationists came as
Japan sent its controversial research whaling fleet of five vessels
in early November to the Antarctic Ocean to kill up to 440 minke
whales, whose meat ends up in supermarkets, inns and restaurants
across Japan.
Although the International Whaling Commission imposed a moratorium
on commercial whaling in 1986, Japan continues to take whales
for the nominal goal of research. The commission does not regulate
the hunt of dolphins.