A group of 25 countries plan to tell Iceland they object to its
resumption of commercial whale hunts despite an international ban, and
will urge it to stop, France s Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday.
Political heavyweights the United States, Germany, Britain and Italy
were part of the initiative, as were South Africa, Brazil, Argentina,
and long-time eco-warrior New Zealand, the ministry said.
Some of these countries have already independently condemned the whale
hunt.
"France and 24 other states will make a joint approach to the Icelandic
foreign and fisheries ministries on Nov. 1 to express their opposition
to the resumption of commercial whale hunting and ask the Icelandic
authorities to reconsider their policy," the French Foreign Ministry
said in a statement.
Reykjavik earlier this month decided to resume commercial whale hunts
for the first time in two decades, allowing whalers to catch nine fin
whales and 30 minke whales in the year to Aug. 31, 2007 despite the 1986
moratorium by the International Whaling Commission. Hunting resumed
shortly afterwards.
Fin whales are rated an endangered species on a "Red List" compiled by
the World Conservation Union but Iceland says they are plentiful in the
north Atlantic. Iceland says that its hunts are legal under
international law.
Other countries that had joined the protest included Chile, Spain,
Finland, Ireland, Israel, Monaco, the Netherlands and Sweden.
Land-locked Luxembourg, Austria, the Czech Republic and Slovakia had
also signed on, France said.
The European Union condemned Iceland s decision to resume whaling and
urged it to reconsider the decision earlier this month. The European
Commission was also part of this joint initiative, France said in the
statement.
Iceland, which has hunted minke whales since 2003 as part of scientific
research, has joined Norway in sanctioning full-blown commercial
whaling. Japan allows whaling, but says it is for research purposes.
(
Planet Ark, 1º/11/2006)