Alle Storys
Folgen
Keine Story von OceanCare mehr verpassen.

OceanCare

Once again: Dolphin mass killing in the Faroe Islands

Ein Dokument

Press release

Once again: Dolphin mass killing in the Faroe Islands

Wädenswil, 23. September 2021: Just ten days after a mass killing of more than 1,400 Atlantic white-sided dolphins, the Faroe Islands saw another drive hunt yesterday, September 22nd. This time, 52 pilot whales were driven into a beach and brutally killed. The marine conservation organisation calls on governments of EU Member States and the EU Commission to react immediately and to convince both Denmark and the regional Faroese government to cease the whale and dolphin drive hunts right away.

“This killing of pilot whales is an intolerable provocation,” says Nicolas Entrup, Co-Director International Relations at OceanCare. While the government of the autonomic region of the Faroe Islands reacted to the worldwide outcry after the bloodbath of September 12th by announcing an evaluation of the regulations on the hunting of Atlantic white-sided dolphins, the current hunt targeted a different dolphin species. Pilot whales belong to the dolphin family and are strictly protected by EU species conservation legislation. However, the Faroe Islands are a part of Denmark, but not of the European Union and therefore do not care about the EU’s cetacean protection rules.

“The Faroese drive hunts, which wipe out whole schools of dolphins, undermine all efforts by governments to protect these small cetaceans, which are already suffering from a wide range of threats. Anyone who is not indifferent to biodiversity loss has to do everything to end these practices,” states Fabienne McLellan, OceanCare spokesperson and head of the anti-whaling programme.

OceanCare is calling for international protest and directs an online petition to the EU Commission and the governments of EU Member States to take decisive steps vis-à-vis the Faroese government: https://www.oceancare.org/en/topical/petitions/faroe-islands/

OceanCare calls for:

  • public condemnation of this hunt and engagement in bilateral and international negotiations towards ending the whale and dolphin hunts for good
  • a diplomatic demarche in collaboration with other governments to stop the drive hunt with immediate effect
  • Denmark to use its influence on the Faroe Islands and to provide positive incentives for an end of the whale and dolphin killings, as otherwise it undermines the Agenda 2030 and the EU Biodiversity Strategy
  • EU Members of the IWC to advocate a moratorium on direct hunts of all cetaceans in European waters for the upcoming IWC68 meeting

Media contact

Nicolas Entrup, Co-Director International Relations: M: (+43) 660 211 9963, nentrup@oceancare.org

Further information and links

About OceanCare

OceanCare is a Swiss non-profit organisation. It was founded in 1989 and has a strong commitment to realistic and cooperative initiatives. The organisation works at national and international level in the areas of marine pollution, environmental changes, fisheries, whaling, sealing, captivity of marine mammals and public education. OceanCare holds Special Consultative Status with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations (ECOSOC) and is a partner of the General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean (GFCM), the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS), and the UNEP/CMS Agreement on the Conservation of Cetaceans in the Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea and Contiguous Atlantic Area (ACCOBAMS), as well as UNEP/MAP. OceanCare has also been accredited to the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA), which is the governing body of UNEP as part of the Major Group ‘Science and Technology’ and is a part of the UNEP Global Partnership on Marine Litter.

---
OceanCare, Gerbestrasse 6, CH-8820 Wädenswil
Tel +41 44 780 66 88,  presseinfo@oceancare.org, www.oceancare.org
Folgen Sie uns:
 Twitter
 LinkedIn
 Facebook
 Instagram
Weitere Storys: OceanCare
Weitere Storys: OceanCare
  • 02.09.2021 – 14:34

    “Slow down to save the climate”

    Press release / interview proposal OceanCare Wädenswil, Vienna, Madrid, 2nd September 2021 “Slow down to save the climate” Reducing shipping speed helps tackle the climate crisis with immediate effect - Climate crisis: Mediterranean Sea projected to heat up by 1.8 to 3.5 degrees until 2100[i] - Climate offenders: New EMTER Report says that maritime ...

    Ein Dokument
  • 14.07.2021 – 15:20

    OCEANCARE WELCOMES THE INCLUSION OF SHIPPING IN THE EU EMISSIONS TRADING SCHEME

    OceanCare's first assessment following the presentation of the European Commission’s "Fit for 55" legislative package OCEANCARE WELCOMES THE INCLUSION OF SHIPPING IN THE EU EMISSIONS TRADING SCHEME The EU thus sets an example to the International Maritime Organization on the need to establish a global ...

    Ein Dokument