INDEPENDENT NEWS

Caribbean Support For Sth Pacific Whale Sanctuary

Published: Fri 27 Apr 2001 03:55 PM
Caribbean Support For South Pacific Whale Sanctuary
Auckland, 27th April 2001 - A week after Pacific Island countries declared their unanimous support for the proposed South Pacific Whale Sanctuary, a new poll (1) shows Eastern Caribbean people also support the proposed Sanctuary by a margin of four to one.
The poll result flies in the face of Caribbean government votes against the South Pacific sanctuary at the International Whaling Commission (IWC) in Adelaide last year.
People living in the six Caribbean members of the IWC were asked whether or not their countries should support the establishment of a South Pacific Whale Sanctuary. The MORI poll found over half (54%) support the Sanctuary, and only 13% oppose it (2).
Last year the IWC failed to support the Sanctuary proposal, largely because Antigua & Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, St Lucia, St Kitts and Nevis, St Vincent & the Grenadines voted against it.
Greenpeace oceans campaigner, Bianca Havas says " Pacific Island countries are committed to this sanctuary. This recent survey clearly shows that Caribbean people also support it. It’s now up to the Caribbean governments to act and not bow to the power of the Japanese aid dollar. Caribbean island states need to co- operate with the Pacific Islands as they co-operate on other issues.”
The MORI poll results come as Greenpeace's ship Arctic Sunrise begins a three week tour of the Eastern Caribbean to promote Caribbean involvement in a South Pacific whale sanctuary. Greenpeace campaigners from the South Pacific, Japan and elsewhere will ask the Caribbean public and governments to support Pacific Island wishes for a South Pacific Whale Sanctuary.
In July 2001, the IWC will again vote on the South Pacific Whale Sanctuary proposal. Both the South Pacific and the East Caribbean states are under intense pressure from Japan to prevent the sanctuary. New evidence of Japanese vote buying at the IWC - through aid donation - emerged last week.
Tongan MP Samiu K. Vaipulu, has recently told a Regional Forum on a South Pacific Whale Sanctuary (3) that he had refused to discuss “whaling and Japanese grants to Tonga” with a Japanese delegation that visited the Kingdom last year.
“I refused to discuss grants in the context of whaling because the two are totally separate,” Mr Vaipulu said. “Sometimes donor countries try to tell us what to do and it is time for us to tell them we can do it ourselves in the South Pacific.”
Contact– Oceans Campaigner Sarah Duthie, 025 927 301 or Media Officer Samantha Magick, +61 413 740 450. For Pacific oceans campaigner Lata Yaqona aboard the Arctic Sunrise - contact Samantha Magick. Visit: www.greenpeace.org
Notes to Editors The report contains the findings of a survey conducted by MORI (Market & Opinion Research International) on behalf of Greenpeace between February and March 2001. The survey was carried out in six counties to ascertain the views on environmental issues. Interviews were conducted by face-to- face omnibus between 19 February and 30 March among six Eastern Caribbean nations: Antigua (527 interviews), Dominica (501 interviews), Grenada (503 interviews), St Kitts (500 interviews), St Lucia (505 interviews), and St Vincent (505 interviews). Any survey, which is not conducted amongst the total population but amongst a sample drawn from the total population, is open to certain sampling tolerances. Based on a 95% confidence level, the margin of error for each country’s survey is about +/-4.5 percent. For further details, see www.mori.com.
(2) There was massive support of levels of eight to one in Antigua (47% for, 7% against) and St Kitts & Nevis (60% to 7%); seven to one in Dominica (66% to 9%), four to one in Grenada (53% to 14%), and three to one in St Lucia (47% to 15%), that their countries should support the SPWS. Even in St Vincent, a country with whaling traditions, those supporting the vote on the establishment of the SPWS, outnumbered those opposing it in a ratio of 2 to 1 (51% compared to 26%).
(3) The 16 countries at the Regional Forum for a South Pacific Whale Sanctuary last week were American Samoa, Australia, Cook Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, French Polynesia, Kiribati, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Niue, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Tokelau, Tuvalu, Tonga, and Wallis and Futuna.
Greenpeace New Zealand
Greenpeace exists because this fragile earth deserves a voice.
Greenpeace is an independent global campaigning organisation that acts to change attitudes and behaviour, to protect and conserve the environment and to promote peace.

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