Lodi News-Sentinel

Hundreds of dolphins driven into fjord, killed on Faroe Islands

- Steffen Trumpf

COPENHAGEN — Hundreds of dolphins have been driven into a fjord and killed on the Faroe Islands, according to media reports and environmen­talists.

According to the Faroese radio station KVF, more than 1,400 of the animals were killed in the Skalafjord on Sunday evening.

As reported by the Danish Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n on Tuesday, the action has reignited the local debate about the traditiona­l whale hunt. This hunt is called “grindadrap” and has been practiced for centuries on the islands in the North Atlantic, which are part of the Danish kingdom but are largely autonomous.

Even the former chairman of the Faroese associatio­n for pilot whaling told KVF that the killing of such a large number of dolphins was excessive.

The current head of the associatio­n feared for the reputation of the Faroe Islands. It was time to seriously discuss whether the hunting of dolphins should continue to be allowed, he told the online medium In.fo.

The environmen­tal organizati­on Sea Shepherd posted a long video on Facebook showing men pulling the animals out of blood-red water onto a beach.

The organizati­on spoke of the largest group of marine mammals ever killed in a single action on the Faroe Islands. A school of dolphins is something beautiful to admire and should not be dragged onto a bloodsoake­d beach, one user wrote in response.

“The hunt is senseless and caused great animal suffering according to eyewitness­es. A line has been crossed here and a new dimension of hunting has been reached,” the Swiss-based marine conservati­on organizati­on OceanCare also criticized.

Whaling on the Faroe Islands dates back to Viking times. The animals are driven by ships and boats into a bay, slaughtere­d there and the meat is then distribute­d to the participan­ts.

Mainly pilot whales are killed, but sometimes also dolphins.

According to Faroese counts, a total of 576 pilot whales and 35 white-sided dolphins were killed in 2020, meaning the number of over 1,400 dolphins killed is exceptiona­lly high.

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