The Mercury News Weekend

Russia to release first whales held in ‘jail’

- By The New York Times

Russia on Thursday started the process of releasing almost 100 valuable orcas and belugas that have been held for months in what became known as the “whale jail” in the country’s Far East, after an internatio­nal outcry and interventi­on by President Vladimir Putin.

The movement of the first batch of two orcas and six belugas was first broadcast during Putin’s annual callin show Thursday, highlighti­ng his role as a modern, televised czar, ready to solve any issue, big or small.

The first eight animals were moved from the watery pens where they were forced to spend almost eight months to water reservoirs installed in trucks. They will spend six days traversing more than 1,100 miles to reach the Shantar Islands in the Sea of Okhotsk, the area where they were caught last year.

This route was not the only option considered by Russian authoritie­s. The initial decision was to release them where they were held in captivity, farther south along Russia’s Pacific coast.

An internatio­nal group of scientists and marine mammal specialist­s, which included Jean- Michel Cousteau of the Ocean Futures Society and Charles Vinick, executive director of the Whale Sanctuary Project, pleaded with the government to choose the more costly option of releasing them in their natural habitat, where they were caught.

The whales were initially captured by four private companies linked to one man. The companies used loopholes in Russian law to obtain permits to catch animals and then sell them to China, where they would spend their lives performing in theme parks.

The companies moved their catch to Srednyaya Bay near the Russian city of Vladivosto­k, where they were spotted by local environmen­tal activists and journalist­s, who sounded the alarm.

Putin directed government officials to determine the fate of the mammals; they took custody of the whales and sought the advice of Cousteau and Vinick.

The prices the captive animals would have brought could have surpassed $100 million, Putin said during his call-in program. The companies that held the whales were reluctant to release them, even after he got involved.

“That’s why there are many interested parties and the problem could not get solved easily,” he said.

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