Call for U.S. Leadership to Protect Whales
Whales Need US:
More than 50 members of Congress and 20 Conservation Groups Call for U.S. Leadership to Protect Whales
New Poll Reveals Americans’ Steadfast Support of Strong Action to Save Whales
Washington, D.C. (April 17, 2007) – The “Whales Need US” coalition, an unprecedented joint effort of 20 U.S-based environmental, conservation and animal welfare organisations, representing more than 15 million people, today urged the Bush Administration to intensify its efforts to end commercial whaling.
New U.S. poll results on attitudes toward whaling show the vast majority of the American public opposes commercial whaling and supports greater protection for whales, while polling data from Japan shows that a sizeable majority of the Japanese public does not support whaling in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary. A national survey of 1,000 registered U.S. voters conducted on behalf of IFAW (International Fund for Animal Welfare) by Market Strategies, Inc., in late March found:
· 78% oppose
commercial whaling
· 78% are concerned about the hunting
of whales in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary
· 59%
would be more likely to vote for a Presidential candidate
who took a firm stand against Japanese whaling
· More
than 50% would be willing to stop buying Japanese products
to convince the Japanese Government to stop its scientific
research whaling
·
In a related initiative, the
coalition praised the bipartisan group of 56 members of
Congress, led by Rep. Nick Rahall (D-W. Va.), Chairman of
the House Natural Resources Committee, who sent a strongly
worded letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
Secretary of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez, instructing them to
fight harder for whale conservation and against commercial
whaling at the upcoming International Whaling Commission
meeting to be held this May in Anchorage, Alaska. The
letter was also signed by the Chairman of the House Foreign
Affairs Committee, Rep. Tom Lantos (D-Calif.), and expresses
the views of the two committee chairmen with oversight
authority of the U.S delegation to the IWC.
The IWC is the international body charged with managing the world's whale populations. A moratorium on commercial whaling was established in 1986 by the IWC, yet more than 20,000 whales have been killed since then for commercial purposes.
"With the IWC meeting being held on U.S. soil for the first time since 1989, the upcoming meeting provides an opportunity for the United States to reestablish itself as a leader on whale conservation," said Rep. Rahall. "The United States has the opportunity to reverse the current trend within the commission and work with like-minded countries to safeguard the moratorium on commercial whaling and advance a strong conservation agenda that addresses the many and varied threats that confront the world's whales and dolphins," he continued.
The Whales Need US Coalition:
American Cetacean Society
Animal Welfare
Institute
Cetacean Society International
The Cousteau
Society
Defenders of Wildlife
Dolphin
Connection
Earth Island Institute
Environmental
Investigation Agency
Greenpeace USA
The Humane Society
of the United States/Humane Society International
IFAW
(International Fund for Animal Welfare)
International
Wildlife Coalition
Natural Resources Defense
Council
The Ocean Conservancy
The Pew Charitable
Trusts
The Sierra Club
Whale and Dolphin Conservation
Society
The Whaleman Foundation
World Society for the
Protection of Animals
World Wildlife Fund US
For More Information: www.whalesneedus.org
ENDS