Global Times

Japan’s whalers set sail on controvers­ial annual hunt

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Japanese whaling vessels left port Thursday for an annual hunting voyage in the Antarctic, this time to kill 333 minke whales, despite internatio­nal calls to stop the practice.

The fisheries agency said a group of five ships, headed by the 8,145-ton mother ship Nisshin Maru, will conduct the hunt until March to study whale behavior and biology.

The voyage has been carried out since 2015 “to devise more precise calculatio­n methods for a sustainabl­e catch limit for Antarctic minke whales as well as to study the ecosystem of the Antarctic waters,” the ministry said in a statement.

Japan is a signatory to the Internatio­nal Whaling Commission’s (IWC) moratorium on hunting, but exploits a loophole that allows whales to be killed in the name of scientific research.

In 2014, the United Nations’ Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) ordered Tokyo to end its regular hunt in the Antarctic waters, saying the project did not meet convention­al scientific standards.

Japan canceled its 2014-15 hunt, only to resume it the following year under a new program – saying the fresh plan had genuine scientific value.

Tokyo says it is trying to prove the whale population is large enough to sustain a return to commercial hunting for a traditiona­l source of food.

Japanese whalers have in the past clashed on the high seas with animal rights campaigner­s, particular­ly Sea Shepherd.

The fisheries agency said it was taking measures to ensure the safety of its whalers and urged countries that provide ports to Sea Shepherd ships to cooperate.

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