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Season’s first dolphins killed in Japan

Published: 16 Sep 2014 - 10:40 pm | Last Updated: 20 Jan 2022 - 11:29 pm

TOKYO:  The first dolphins of the season were slaughtered yesterday in the small Japanese town of Taiji, campaigners and a local fishermen’s union said, commencing an annual cull repeatedly condemned by animal rights groups.
Activists from the environmentalist group Sea Shepherd have been monitoring a bay in Taiji, southwestern Japan, since the six-month dolphin hunting season began earlier this month.
“First pod of 2014-2015 being driven into cove now,” the activists from Sea Shepherd, who call themselves “Cove Guardians,” tweeted at 10.33am.
About an hour later, @CoveGuardians said: “First dolphin murder of the drive hunt season is complete as dead bodies are dragged to Taiji butcherhouse.”
An official from the local fishermen’s union also confirmed: “We caught 12 Risso’s dolphins,” he said, adding they had already been killed for their meat.
There were no dolphins left in the bay, he said, and fishermen would continue with their hunt over the coming days.
The campaigners are streaming live footage of a secluded bay, into which local fishermen corral hundreds of dolphins for slaughter, a practice that thrust the small town into the global spotlight in 2010 when it became the subject of the Oscar-winning documentary “The Cove.”
Defenders say it is a tradition and point out that the animals it targets are not endangered, a position echoed by the Japanese government.
They say Western objections are hypocritical and ignore the vastly larger number of cows, pigs and sheep butchered to satisfy demand elsewhere.
But critics of the practice say there is insufficient demand for the animals’ meat, which in any case contains dangerous levels of mercury.                      AFP