Japanese whalers have claimed victory in a court settlement ending years of cat-and-mouse with the Sea Shepherd anti-whaling group. But the activists say the US court decision has narrow implications and vow to fight.
Under the settlement, Sea Shepherd is "permanently enjoined from physically attacking" Japanese whaling vessels and crew members, a statement by the Institute of Cetacean Research and Kyodo Senpaku, both whaling umbrella groups, said.
They are also prohibited "from navigating in a manner that is likely to endanger their safe navigation," the Tokyo-based institute said.
But Sea Shepherd said the US court settlement has a narrow jurisdiction that applies only to its US branch of operations.
"The ruling in the US courts affects only our US entity," the group's global chief executive Alex Cornelissen wrote in a statement. "Sea Shepherd Global and all other entities around the world, other than the USA, will continue to oppose the illegal Japanese whaling in the Antarctic."
It added that its non-US branches would pursue its campaign of direct actions designed to deter commercial whaling.
The anti-whaling activists harass whalers with paint and stink bombs, ram their ships, and have snared ship propellers with ropes.
The hunt resumed at the end of last year with the whaling fleet returning to Japan in March of this year after having killed at least 333 Minke whales in the Antarctic.
Japan resumes whale hunt
In 2014, the International Court of Justice banned Japan from further whaling activities, questioning the scientific justification for the hunt. But as of April 10, 2015, four ships have left port, off to kill whales.
Image: picture-alliance/Robert Harding
Harpoons ready
As of Friday (10.04.2015), four Japanese whaling ships are on the way into the Pacific. By the end of this May, they may have killed up to 51 minke whales. Officials argue that the hunt is necessary for research into the effects whales have on coastal fishing. Just one year ago, the International Court of Justice in The Hague banned Japan from continuing its whale hunt.
Image: KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images
Ban ignored
The hunt for the endangered sea mammals has been outlawed since 1986 - but Norwegian, Icelandic and Japanese companies continue to hunt whales. The Japanese, in particular, argue that their whaling program is conducted for purposes of scientific research. But Japan is also hunting ever less and less: this past January, two whaling ships set out to counting whale and take tissue samples.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Japan v. whales
For 20 years, Australia tried unsuccessfully to persuade Japan to stop its whaling program through diplomatic channels - and finally took the country to court in 2013. In Late March 2014, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague ruled Japan's whaling program is not for scientific purposes, and ordered a temporary stay.
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo
Endangered species
Whale stocks have stabilized since the ban was implemented 27 years ago. However, more than half of the 13 great whale species are classified as endangered or vulnerable. This includes blue whales, fin whales, sei whales, southern right whales and sperm whales. Whales can grow to be 33 meters (108 feet) long and weigh 190 tonnes (209 tons) - making them the largest animals on Earth.
Image: DW
Japanese whalers
Hunted down in the name of science, the whales' meat is later sold to stores and specialty restaurants. The Tokyo-based Institute of Cetacean Research was founded exactly one year after the 1986 moratorium issued by the International Whaling Commission.
Image: Greenpeace/Kate Davison
A Japanese tradition
Whale meat has long been on dinner plates in Japan. Especially after World War II, the population of the island nation depended on whale meat. Schools and canteens cherished it because it was cheaper than beef. But times have changed - and now whale meat accounts for only 1 percent of meat consumed in Japan.
Image: gemeinfrei
Dog food
You can find up to 7,000 tons of whale meat stored in Japanese warehouses. Due to a lack of buyers, a Japanese firm had fin whale meat processed into dog food. However, protests by international animal rights groups made the company announce that it was discontinuing production of the dog treats.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Act of defiance
Despite all this, many Japanese still support whale hunting and decry the actions of environmental campaigners like Greenpeace as eco-terrorism. Japan's government has refused to give in to international pressure, and has been subsidizing whaling programs since 1988 with around 800 million yen (6.3 million euros) a year.
Image: picture-alliance/ dpa
Japan not alone
Iceland and Norway also have whaling programs in defiance of the ban. Both countries lodged objections to the moratorium, and don't feel the need to abide by it.
Image: picture-alliance / dpa
Legal whaling
Indigenous people such as the Chukchi in Russia or the Inuit in Canada are officially entitled to hunt whales as long as they don't do it for commercial purposes. For these people, whaling is a tradition that goes back hundreds of years. The sea mammals provide them with meat, oil and bones. Every part of the animal is used.
Image: picture-alliance/empics
Sea Shepherd
Environmental groups played an important role in issuance of the whaling ban. For decades, they led spectacular campaigns to draw the world's attention to the issue of whale hunting. The organization Sea Shepherd is known for its controversial and aggressive approach to protecting the giants of the sea.
Image: cc-by-nc-sa3.0/guano
Watching instead of hunting
Many countries that used to have whaling programs are now in the business of whale watching. Some of the whale watchers in Japan and Norway are former whale hunters who now share their knowledge with tourists. Also in Japan, an ever-increasing number of citizens would rather see these animals in the wild than on their dinner plates.