Animal Advocates Watchdog

Good News: EU to vote today on ban parameters

http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5gPgaLev7Yd6bZrxsy8psdnNoM0cA

ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Tense times are ahead for Canada's sealing industry
as the European Union grapples with its proposed seal products ban,
beginning with a vote Monday that could determine the parameters of
the legislation.

A 44-member committee of various political persuasions will meet in
Brussels to decide whether to implement a labelling and certification
system that would allow the import of seal products, as long as they
were hunted in a humane manner.

That will be followed by a vote set for early April by European
parliamentarians, who harbour a wide range of opinions on the
emotionally charged issue.

Canadian fisheries ambassador Loyola Sullivan concedes there will be
some type of ban, but whether Canadian seal pelts and other products
will be exempt from it is still up for debate.

"If anyone thinks that in Europe that they're going to have no ban and
they don't want to see this proceed, they're going to be sadly
mistaken," Sullivan said in an interview.

"I think it's fair to say that the will - certainly the public in
Europe, the will of parliamentarians and member states - is (in favour
of) some type of ban."

Canadian politicians, including Sullivan and federal Fisheries
Minister Gail Shea, have met with their European counterparts in
recent weeks in an effort to convince them that the commercial harp
seal hunt is humane.

Shea said it's too early to say whether the federal government would
support a labelling and certification system.

"It depends what the clause looks like," she said.

"If there's something that we can live with, then we'll be OK with
that. But if this inhibits our hunt at all, then no, it's not
something that we can live with."

Voicing the frustration of some sealers, Jack Troake says it's
difficult to make the hunt appear more humane because of its very
nature.

Off the north coast of Newfoundland, where the majority of seals are
killed each year, most hunters use rifles. But the hakapik is also
sometimes used to help kill seals wounded by rifle fire.

"There's no way in God's world can you carry on this hunt and make it
look nice," Troake said.

He said he is uncertain how a labelling and certification system would
affect his 58-year livelihood.

"We're all very concerned."

Barbara Slee, a full-time campaigner for the International Fund for
Animal Welfare in Brussels, said labelling and certification is
fraught with problems.

"In practice, it would be impossible to enforce," Slee said.

"You can't verify whether a seal product really comes from a seal that
was humanely killed."

Slee and other animal welfare activists are calling for an outright
ban that would prevent the import of all seal products, except those
hunted by the Inuit.

The EU's proposed legislation aims to harmonize a patchwork of laws
among several member countries that ban seal products.

It would allow the import of seal products from countries that can
guarantee their hunting practices are "consistent with high animal-
welfare standards" and that the animals are killed swiftly without
undue suffering. Special exemptions would be allowed for Canada's Inuit.

The European Parliament is scheduled to vote on the proposed ban April
2. The European Council would then cast its decision on the matter,
likely in June.

An import ban could deliver a devastating blow to Atlantic Canadian
fishermen who rely on the annual hunt as a source of income, shutting
down critical shipment points including Holland and Germany.

Canada's largest markets for seal products, such as Russia, China and
Norway, are outside the EU. But sealing industry experts fear a ban
would curb the demand for seal fur from the fashion industry and
disrupt shipping routes.

Ottawa estimates the EU ban could cut in half the $13 million annual
value of the seal hunt to some 6,000 sealers in the country.

In the past three years, the total allowable catch in Canada has
hovered between 270,000 and 335,000 seals annually. It is the largest
marine mammal slaughter in the world.

Shea is expected to announce this year's seal hunt quota by the middle
of this month.

Messages In This Thread

Good News: Canadian Senator may introduce legislation to end seal hunt
Bad News: Carries no legal obligation on government
Good News: EU to vote today on ban parameters
Rotten tomato award - Minister of Fisheries and Oceans defends "hard-working" sealers
That's how democracy works Jack!
Good News: European Parliament committee approved the proposal
Bad News: Exempts Inuit
The IMCO Opinion will go forward to plenary weeks from now
Please email your Senators *LINK*
In Response to seal hunt email campaign, government shuts down email servers *LINK*
Putin condemns hunting of baby seals
Re: Putin condemns hunting of baby seals
"It's a bloody industry." Putin condemns hunting of adult seals
Canadian senator makes futile bid to ban seal hunt

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