This undated handout picture released by the Institute of Cetacean Research shows a minke whale on the deck of a whaling ship for research in the Antarctic Ocean. Japan will dispatch a ‘research’ whaling mission to the Antarctic Ocean today, the government said.


AFP/Tokyo

Japan has announced it would send a whaling fleet to the Antarctic Tuesday after a one-year suspension, defying international criticism and a UN legal ruling that the “research” expedition is a commercial hunt in disguise.
Tokyo has for years come under intense global pressure to stop hunts that opponents decry as inhumane, but the government defends them as an inherent part of Japanese culture.
Conservation group Sea Shepherd Australia said that it would use its own ship to follow the mission, which Japan’s Fisheries Agency said in a statement yesterday would aim to kill a total of 333 minke whales.
The group has clashed with Japanese whaling ships in the past.
“Any illegal activity we come across we’ll engage, our history speaks for itself,” said Sea Shepherd Australia director Jeff Hansen.
The UN’s highest court, the International Court of Justice, ruled in March 2014 that the annual Southern Ocean expedition was a commercial hunt masquerading as science to skirt an international moratorium on whaling.
After that ruling, Japan chose not to carry out lethal hunting during its 2014-15 Antarctic research mission, saying it would only count whales and take skin samples.
The Fisheries Agency insisted yesterday that the upcoming whaling research mission reflected previous recommendations from the International Whaling Commission’s scientific committee and that it would cut annual minke catches by two-thirds to 333.
It did not say why it chose that number, though the committee has previously said Japan had failed to justify the need for even a reduced annual figure.
“We think all the necessary procedures are over,” a fisheries official said.
“As we seek to resume commercial whaling, it is crucial to get information as to whales’ migration, reproductive rates and the age pyramid of the population for setting catch quotas,” the official added, stressing that lethal whaling is necessary “to get this kind of essential information”.
“The research ships will depart for new whale research in the Antarctic on December 1, 2015,” the Fisheries Agency said, adding that the research period would run from late December to early March.
The fleet will include a mother ship and three other vessels with a total of 160 crew members.
Japanese media had earlier reported that the government planned to resume the hunts, prompting a strong reaction.
“We do not accept in any way, shape or form the concept of killing whales for so-called ‘scientific research’,” Australian Environment Minister Greg Hunt said on Saturday. “Non-lethal research techniques are the most effective and efficient method of studying all cetaceans.”
Yesterday a spokeswoman for Hunt said that Canberra was “keeping its options open” regarding a potential response to the resumption.
A coalition of Japanese non-government organisations, including Greenpeace Japan, has issued a joint statement on the matter, urging the government to “uphold international rules”.
“The Japanese government should stop research whaling in the Antarctic and should start taking actions toward conservation of the ocean,” the statement said.
Japan accuses opponents of being emotional about the mammals and disregarding what it says is evidence to support its position.
It also conducts hunts in the name of science in the Northwest Pacific and off the Japanese coast.
Japan has long said its Antarctic hunt was allowed under an exemption in the global whaling moratorium that allows for lethal research.
But it makes no secret of the fact that meat from the mammals – despite being killed ostensibly for research – is processed into food, and says the whale population in any case is big enough to allow sustainable whaling.