Chris Butler-Stroud and Michael Mountain on recent developments in the campaign against cruelty to whales and dolphinsJune has been a good month for those of us who have long campaigned against whales and dolphins being held captive in small tanks for human entertainment (Two whales flown from Shanghai aquarium to sanctuary in Iceland, theguardian.com, 20 June). Canada has passed legislation making it an `offence to keep captive, breed, import, or export any whale, dolphin, or porpoise`. Russia has said it will close the loophole used by traffickers capturing cetaceans for `educational and cultural purposes`. President Putin has bowed to pressure to shut the `whale jail` in Russia´s far east and release 10 orcas and more than 80 beluga whales back to the wild.And in the past week, the Sea Life Trust, working with Whale and Dolphin Conservation, has transported two beluga whales from Shanghai to a sanctuary in Iceland - a world-first project that provides a model for ending this cruel industry. With over 3,000 whales and dolphins still in intolerable conditions there is much work to do. But events this month give us hope.Chris Butler-StroudChief executive, Whale and Dolphin Conservation Continue reading...
|