Japan and those whaling votes

by frog

I hope everyone had a relaxing and pleasant Easter break. It was interesting to come back from the break this morning to speculation about numbers at the International Whaling Commission, and whether Japan has *ahem* garnered enough support for a 51% majority.

While they would need at least 75% support from member countries to lift the current moratorium on commercial whaling, there are a number of measures that would assist Japan greatly in its goal of eventually resuming full commercial whaling which could be brought in with a simple majority. Secret ballots, for example, would allow smaller, newer members of the IWC to vote with Japan without facing up to of anti-whaling nations like New Zealand and Australia, and thus probably increase the pro-whaling vote at the commission.

Still, it should be remembered that it was thought Japan had a simple majority last time the IWC met, but in the event too many of its potential allies were absent from the vote and its motions were defeated, so even apparent support is not as strong as it could be.

The IWC meets in St Kitts and Nevis, a pro-whaling nation, in May and June this year. Here’s a taste of how the whaling issue is covered by the local media.

frog says

Published in Environment & Resource Management by frog on Tue, April 18th, 2006   

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