May 22, 2007

Greenpeace protest

Greenpeace activists laid the carcasses of 17 small whales and dolphins in front of the landmark Brandenburg Gate in a dramatic protest to urge countries to resist increasing pressure for a resumption of commercial whaling. Some of the animals died after getting trapped in fish nets, while others showed the scars of being hit by ships' propellers, the activists said.

The gruesome collection, kept in a trough of ice under the hot sun, represented the number of whales and dolphins that die every half-hour or so through human impact, protest organizers said. In a year, 300,000 whales and dolphins drown in fishing nets.

The bodies were collected in the last two to three months from beaches on France's Atlantic coast, the English Channel and Germany's North Sea and Baltic coasts, Greenpeace said. Next week, the International Whaling Commission holds a meeting in Anchorage, Alaska, where Japan is expected to push for a moratorium on commercial whaling to be overturned.

Germany, a member of the IWC, currently holds the presidency of the Group of Eight industrialized countries and also holds the rotating presidency of the European Union, which bans member states from commercial whaling and supports the IWC moratorium. The EU holds IWC observer status. Japan has been on a diplomatic drive to win support for its bid to overturn the 20-year moratorium on commercial whaling ahead of this year's annual IWC meeting on May 28-31. Japan and its supporters are expected to clash there with opponents to its commercial whaling bid including the U.S., Australia, Britain and New Zealand.

Already, Tokyo has conducted scientific whaling allowed by the IWC since its 1986 ban on commercial hunting. Anti-whaling countries and environmental groups say the program is a disguise for commercial whaling.

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