Imperial Valley Press

Faeroese put a cap on dolphin hunt after huge 2021 kill

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COPENHAGEN, Denmark ( AP) — The government on the small Faeroe Islands is proposing an annual catch limit of 500 white- sided dolphins on a provisiona­l basis for 2022 and 2023, after last year’s slaughter of more than 1,400 dolphins in a day led to internatio­nal condemnati­on and local criticism.

The hunt in the

North Atlantic islands is part of a four- century-old traditiona­l drive of sea mammals into shallow water, where they are killed for their meat and blubber. It is not commercial and is authorized, but environmen­tal activists claim it is cruel. Even people in the Faeroes who defend the traditiona­l practice worried

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that the hunt would

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draw unwanted atten

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tion because it was far larger than previous

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ones and seemingly took place without the usual organizati­on.

On Sunday, the government said that the capping measure was

“in response to the unusually large catch” on

Sept. 14, 2021. It added that the proposal is expected to be implemente­d as an executive order by July 25.

“Aspects of that catch were not satisfacto­ry, in particular the unusually large number of dolphins killed,” the government said in a statement. This “is unlikely to be a sustainabl­e level of catch on a long- term annual basis.”

Local media have reported that there were too many dolphins and too few people on the beach to slaughter them, sparking fear the slaughter would revive the discussion about the sea mammal drives and put a negative spin on the ancient tradition of the 18 rocky islands located halfway between Scotland and Iceland. They are semi- independen­t and part of the Danish realm.

Islanders usually kill up to 1,000 sea mammals — chiefly pilot whales — annually, according to data kept by the Faeroe Islands. In 2020, that included only 35 white- sided dolphins. White- sided dolphins and pilot whales are not endangered species.

Each year, islanders drive herds of the mammals into shallow waters. A blow- hole hook is used to secure the beached animals and their spine and main artery leading to the brain are severed with knives. The drives are regulated by law and the meat and blubber are shared on a community basis.

The Faeroese government said it “continues to base its policies and management measures on the right and responsibi­lity of

( its) people to utilize the resources of the sea sustainabl­y. This also includes marine mammals, such as pilot whales and dolphins.”

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