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Activists report that they have been harassed and threatened when trying to document the hunts by local supporters of the dolphin fishermen. Although the killing cove is adjacent to Yoshino Kumano Kokuritsu Koen, a public park, the park is often sealed to visitors by the police during the hunts.<ref>Harnell, Boyd, "", '']'', 14 February 2007.</ref> | Activists report that they have been harassed and threatened when trying to document the hunts by local supporters of the dolphin fishermen. Although the killing cove is adjacent to Yoshino Kumano Kokuritsu Koen, a public park, the park is often sealed to visitors by the police during the hunts.<ref>Harnell, Boyd, "", '']'', 14 February 2007.</ref> | ||
In August 2010, activist ] canceled a planned protest of the dolphin hunt in Taiji after threats from ultra-nationalist groups. Said O'Barry, "It was too dangerous. The big losers are the people of Taiji."<ref>Kageyama, Yuri, "", '']'', 1 September 2010.</ref> |
In August 2010, activist ] canceled a planned protest of the dolphin hunt in Taiji after threats from ultra-nationalist groups. Said O'Barry, "It was too dangerous. The big losers are the people of Taiji."<ref>Kageyama, Yuri, "", '']'', 1 September 2010.</ref> | ||
On 16 December 2011, Dutch activist Erwin Vermeulen, 42, was arrested by local police after allegedly pushing a fisherman who was blocking Vermeulen's entry into a restricted area near the drive hunt cove.<ref>], "Dutchman arrested in whaling town", '']'', 18 December 2011, p. 2.</ref> Vermeulen was acquitted in Wakayama District Court on 22 February, with Judge Satoshi Shibayama stating of Vermeulen's accuser's testimony, "there remains doubt over the credibility of the testimony, which is the only evidence."<ref>], "", '']'', 23 February 2012, p. 3.</ref> | |||
===Documentaries=== | ===Documentaries=== |
Revision as of 22:18, 22 February 2012
The dolphin drive hunt in Taiji, Japan, takes place every year from September to April. According to the Japanese Fisheries Research Agency, 1,623 dolphins were caught in Wakayama Prefecture in 2007 for human consumption or resale to dolphinariums, and most of these were caught at Taiji. The annual dolphin hunting provides income for local residents, but has received international criticism for both the alleged cruelty of the dolphin killing and the high mercury levels of the dolphin meat.
History
Residents of Taiji have been refining whaling techniques and have had significant whaling operations since the early 17th century, and became known as a center for whaling in 1675. Hunting of dolphins for commercial purposes in Taiji still continues. In 2008, 1,484 dolphins and whales were caught, while fisherman planned to catch around 2,400 in 2009. Some of the dolphins are sold to aquatic parks, instead of slaughtered, and Ted Hammond is one of the main brokers for Taiji. Many people living in Japan don't even know about the dolphin hunt and that the meat is givin to schools system.
Health risks
Since 2000, researchers such as Tetsuya Endo, a professor at the Health Sciences University of Hokkaido, have found high concentrations of mercury in the whale and dolphin meat sold around Japan. In their studies, Taiji residents who eat dolphin meat had high level of mercury in their hair. Research done by the National Institute for Minamata Disease (NIMD) in 2008 tested mercury levels in 7 pieces of whale meat (2 were pieces from Taiji) and one bag of mixed whale innards from Taiji. Their results showed that the meat from Taiji had over 13ppm of mercury; over 65% of which was methyl mercury. The whale innards (which are also consumed in the town) had a high concentration of mercury caused mostly by inorganic mercury. Whale meat contaminated with mercury is commonly eaten in the town, and residents have been found to have 10 times the level of mercury in their hair when compared to average Japanese citizens. The Japanese Ministry of Health issued warnings on the consumption of some species of fish, whale and dolphin since 2003. It recommended that children and pregnant women avoid eating them on a regular basis.
2008 AERA article and research
In June 2008, AERA, a Japanese weekly journal, reported that the whale and dolphin meat sold in Taiji contained 160 times higher level of mercury and hairs of 8 men and women had 40 times higher, based on a research conducted by the National Institute for Minamata Disease (NIMD). The NIMD published the full data of the research online a few days later, and explained it in detail to avoid misrepresentation of the research. It has pointed out that the amount of Methyl-mercury, which causes neurological damage, was not exceedingly high, and the mercury in hair showed rapid decrease since tests carried out by other institutions a few months ago to the same people. The NIMD agreed to help in monitoring the health of Taiji residents. The NIMD has checked more than 1,000 Taiji residents since last year. No sign of Minamata disease (mercury poisoning) has been reported but, some of the residents were found to have high levels of mercury in their hair. The collection of data will be finished by the end of March 2010.
2010 mercury testing
In 2010, hair samples from 1,137 Taiji residents were tested for mercury by the National Institute for Minimata Disease. The average amount of methyl mercury found in the hair samples was 11.0 parts per million for men and 6.63 ppm for women, compared with an average of 2.47 ppm for men and 1.64 ppm for women in tests conducted in 14 other locations in Japan. 182 Taiji residents showing extremely high mercury levels underwent further medical testing to check for symptoms of mercury poisoning. None of the Taiji residents, however, displayed any of the traditional symptoms of mercury poisoning, according to the Institute. Japan's National Institute of Population and Social Security Research, however, reports that the mortality rate for Taiji and nearby Koazagawa, where dolphin meat is also consumed, is over 50% higher than the rate for similarly-sized villages throughout Japan.
Environmentalist activities
Hardy Jones, who founded BlueVoice.org with film star Ted Danson in 2000, has gone to Taiji numerous times to try to stop the capture of dolphins and small whales. His film The Dolphin Defender, produced by the PBS series Nature documents these events.
Other celebrities have protested the dolphin killings as well. On November 1, 2007, Hayden Panettiere claimed that she was confronted by Japanese fishermen, as she and several other activists were interfering with their annual hunt by attempting "to rescue a pool of dolphins captured in fishing nets." She drove straight to an airport with her fellow activists and left the country "to avoid being arrested for trespassing by the Japanese police". An officer of the Taiji Fishery Union contradicts such claims, and pointed out "On the 29th a whaling ship which had been fishing in nearby waters returned to port (so there was enough whale meat). We do not want to extinguish whales because we understand that overfishing leads to self-destruction. The activists came into sea again when we were trying to drive small pilot whales off the coast." "[We tried to let the activists go ashore, as the whales might run wild when drove away. But the activists do not understand our language. So we tried to push them away with a stick we use for hunting." The video footage published on Sea Shepherd website shows that the incident took place well after the cull, and also shows a fisherman driving the whales off the coast. The Whaling Industry in Japan claim this kind of act to be an attack on their culture.
Activists report that they have been harassed and threatened when trying to document the hunts by local supporters of the dolphin fishermen. Although the killing cove is adjacent to Yoshino Kumano Kokuritsu Koen, a public park, the park is often sealed to visitors by the police during the hunts.
In August 2010, activist Ric O'Barry canceled a planned protest of the dolphin hunt in Taiji after threats from ultra-nationalist groups. Said O'Barry, "It was too dangerous. The big losers are the people of Taiji."
On 16 December 2011, Dutch activist Erwin Vermeulen, 42, was arrested by local police after allegedly pushing a fisherman who was blocking Vermeulen's entry into a restricted area near the drive hunt cove. Vermeulen was acquitted in Wakayama District Court on 22 February, with Judge Satoshi Shibayama stating of Vermeulen's accuser's testimony, "there remains doubt over the credibility of the testimony, which is the only evidence."
Documentaries
Main article: The Cove (film)A film titled The Cove (formerly The Rising) was secretly recorded over five years with high-tech video and sound equipment in Taiji. This full-length documentary was funded by billionaire James H. Clark and shows controversial dolphin killing techniques and discusses high mercury levels in Taiji dolphin meat. When the film won an Oscar, the mayor of Taiji and the chief of the Taiji Fishery Union said, "Dolphin and whale hunting in Taiji is not an illegal act, in compliance with the Fisheries Act and under Wakayama Prefecture's approval." Taiji town officials have also contested some of the scientific evidence presented by the film.
Since the release of the film, a larger number of activists, mainly non-Japanese, have visited Taiji to protest or film the dolphin hunts. The activists observe and monitor the hunting throughout the hunting season from September until it ends in April. The Taiji fishermen responded by constructing an elaborate structure of tarps to better conceal the drive-hunting activities in and around the cove. Also, the town set up a police box staffed with 10 policemen near the cove to prevent conflict between the protesters and the fishermen.
See also
References
- "Taiji told to stop dolphin carnage or sister ties end". The Japan Times. 25 August 2009. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
- Matsutani, Minoru, "Details on how Japan's dolphin catches work", Japan Times, September 23, 2009, p. 3.
- 太地は古式捕鯨発祥の地として名高く、当地の豪族、和田家一族の忠兵衛頼元が尾張師崎(知多半島の突端)の漁師・伝次と泉州堺の浪人伊右衛門とともに捕鯨技術の研究を進め、慶長11年(1606年)太地浦を基地として、大々的に突捕り法による捕鯨を始めました。
- http://www.town.taiji.wakayama.jp/kankou/sub_01.html その後、延宝3年(1675年)和田頼治(のちの太地角右エ門)が網取り法を考案したことによって太地の捕鯨は飛躍的に発展しました。 紀州藩の保護もあって、「捕鯨の本場太地」は天下にその名をとどろかせ、熊野灘の捕鯨は最盛期を迎えました。
- "Taiji dolphin hunt begins: about 100 dolphins and 50 pilot whales driven into cove". Japan Probe. 2009-09-09. Retrieved 2010-08-31.
- Johnston, Eric, "Mercury danger in dolphin meat", Japan Times, September 23, 2009, p. 3.
- つまり高値の要因は無機水銀の蓄積であること、が明らかとなっています。
- "Mercury levels of whale-eating town's residents 10 times average " Japan Today: Japan News and Discussion". Japantoday.com. Retrieved 2010-08-31.
- 平成15年6月3日に公表した「水銀を含有する魚介類等の 摂食に関する注意事項」について
- 2008/6/13 熊本日日新聞記事「鯨から高濃度水銀」 2008/6/16 AERA「『鯨の町』住民から水銀40倍」について
- 映画『The Cove』にまたピリピリ
- Matsutani, Minoru, "Taiji locals test high for mercury: In surprise, experts fail to discover any signs of illness", Japan Times, May 10, 2010, p. 1.
- Matsutani, Minoru, "Most Taiji residents rest easy, refuse to change diet", Japan Times, May 10, 2010, p. 2.
- Harnell, Boyd, "Experts fear Taiji mercury tests are fatally flawed", Japan Times, May 23, 2010, p. 12.
- Newsvine - Panettiere Protests Japan Dolphin Hunt
- 週刊新潮 2007年12月6日号
- Sea Shepherd - Dolphin Video Clips
- Heroes Star Hayden Panettiere In Japan Dolphin Cull Clash Sky News
- Harnell, Boyd, "Eyewitness to slaughter in Taiji's killing coves", Japan Times, 14 February 2007.
- Kageyama, Yuri, "Threats keep dolphin protest out of Japan village", AP, 1 September 2010.
- Kyodo News, "Dutchman arrested in whaling town", Japan Times, 18 December 2011, p. 2.
- Kyodo News, "Activist acquitted in assault in Taiji", Japan Times, 23 February 2012, p. 3.
- Boyd Harnell. "Secret film will show slaughter to the world". Japan Times Online. The Japan Times. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
- アカデミー賞:「ザ・コーヴ」受賞に和歌山反発; Matsutani, Minoru, "'Cove' Oscar is Taiji's chagrin", Japan Times, March 9, 2010, p. 1.
- Alabaster, Jay, (Associated Press), and Kyodo News, "Activists may shift tactics in Taiji; Sigh of relief" and Japan Times, 3 March 2011, p. 3.
- Kyodo News, "Typhoon delays Taiji dolphin hunt", Japan Times, 2 September 2011, p. 2.