Animal Advocates Watchdog

Humpback whales off Japan's list

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Humpback whales off Japan's list
NO HUNTING: Anti-whaling pressure from new Aussie gov't
- AFP
TOKYO - Japan says it's dropping plans to start hunting humpback whales for the first time in four decades after protests led by Australia seeking to spare the mammals.

Tokyo has never before backed down over one of its whaling expeditions, which have been a longstanding strain in relations with its Western allies.

It also marks a coup for Australia's new left-leaning Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, who has stepped up the pressure on Japan since taking office this month, including ordering a patrol ship and planes to track the whalers.

Japan had planned to harpoon 50 humpback whales on its current expedition, the first time since the 1960s that Tokyo would have hunted the species, which are major attractions for Australian whale-watchers.

"Japan will not hunt humpback whales," government spokesman Nobutaka Machimura said Friday.

"It's true that Australia expressed quite a strong opinion to Japan on this," Machimura said. "As a result, I hope that this will lead to better relations with Australia."

But he vowed the fleet en route to the Antarctic Ocean would go ahead with its hunt of nearly 1,000 other whales, saying Australia and Japan had basic cultural differences on the issue.

"Australians consider whales to be very affectionate, something I can't really relate to. But apparently they give names to every whale and there's quite strong public sentiment," Machimura said.

Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith welcomed the move but called for Japan to end all whaling and vowed to press ahead with plans to monitor the hunt.

"The Australian government strongly believes that there is no credible justification for the hunting of any whales," Smith said.

Rudd's Labor Party had accused the conservative government of his predecessor, John Howard, of being too soft on Japan out of consideration for economic ties.

Machimura denied Japan was bowing to Australian pressure and said it was "suspending" the hunt of humpback whales for one to two years after talks with the International Whaling Commission.

Machimura said the suspension was part of Japan's efforts to "normalize" the IWC - Tokyo's expression for moving the 78-nation body back to its original role of managing whale hunting.

"This is a very emotional issue, but Japan insofar as possible would like to conduct its scientific research and have cool-headed discussions," Machimura said.

Japan carries out the hunt using a loophole in a 1986 IWC moratorium on commercial whaling that allows "lethal research" on the giant mammals. Only Norway and Iceland defy the moratorium outright.

Greenpeace and the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society have each sent a ship to Antarctic waters to try to disrupt Japanese whaling.

Humpback whales, protected under a 1966 worldwide moratorium after years of overhunting, are renowned for their complex songs and acrobatic displays.

In Japan, the government's U-turn was welcomed by environmentalists who have fought a long and lonely battle against whaling.

"This proves that international pressure can work," said Junichi Sato, who heads the anti-whaling campaign for Greenpeace Japan.

"The decision also reflects the fact that Japanese people actually don't eat whale meat a lot," Sato said.

"Many Japanese wonder why Japan has to go all the way to Antarctic Ocean to hunt whales."

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Humpback whales off Japan's list

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