16/02/2006 - Australia will attend
an international meeting in the United Kingdom this month
to work to stop a push to reopen commercial whaling.
Australian Environment Minister Senator Ian Campbell said
Australia’s position would be forcefully argued by the Government’s
International Whaling Commissioner – effectively Australia’s
Whale Conservation Commissioner – Mr Howard Bamsey.
Mr Bamsey will depart next week for the meeting in Cambridge
to prosecute Australia’s case for a global ban on all forms
of scientific and commercial whaling.
The meeting will be held under the auspices of the International
Whaling Commission (IWC) to discuss what is called a ‘Revised
Management Scheme’ within which pro-whaling nations will
push for a return to commercial whaling.
There is currently a moratorium on commercial whaling, however
a significant number of members of the IWC have sided with
Japan to try to lift this moratorium by negotiating a Revised
Management Scheme.
“Australia will continue to oppose any moves to reintroduce
commercial whaling,” Senator Campbell said.
“Mr Bamsey has been tasked with working alongside other
pro-conservation nations to gain the support necessary to
continue the moratorium on whaling with the eventual aim
of leading to a permanent ban.”
Japan will this year more than double the number of Antarctic
minke whales it has targeted in the past to 935. It also
plans to take threatened humpback whales and endangered
fin whales, ramping up to 50 of each in 2007/08. Norway
and Iceland also continue to undertake whaling in defiance
of world opinion.
“Australia strongly objects to all forms of scientific and
commercial whaling and will continue to work hard to strengthen
and build on the coalition of countries opposed to whaling
in the lead up to the next IWC meeting in June,” Senator
Campbell said.
“While we continue to review all options to bring about
an end to commercial whaling, we believe the most effective
way to do this is through international diplomatic effort.
“Some will claim that the Australian Government should pursue
legal action, but I can assure Australians that if I believed
that legal action could put an end to scientific whaling,
I would have taken that path.”
This is a view shared by New Zealand’s International Whaling
Commissioner and former NZ Labour Prime Minister Sir Geoffrey
Palmer, who said: “We have been looking at the legal theories
that are available against the Japanese for some months
… and there is no legal theory that is available that can
prevent, in our view, the Japanese from doing what they
are doing … A sovereign government cannot undertake legal
action unless it has a good chance of success.”
The Australian newspaper, 16 Jan 2006
“I do not pretend that our task is an easy one. Nor do I
deny that there is a very real possibility that Japan may
gain support for its scientific whaling program and other
pro-whaling proposals at the next International Whaling
Commission meeting in the Carribean in June,” Senator Campbell
said.
“However, I will continue to strongly protest nonetheless
and Australians can be assured that I will be working as
hard as I can to see that this does not happen.”
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