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Anti-whaling brigade guilty of 'eco-imperialism': Japan

Opposition to Japan's whaling programme is a kind of "eco-imperialism" that imposes one value system on another and is based on emotion, not science, Japan's top whaling official said.

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Dead minke whales on the deck of a Japanese whaling vessel. Photo: AP
Reuters

Opposition to Japan's whaling programme is a kind of "eco-imperialism" that imposes one value system on another and is based on emotion, not science, Japan's top whaling official said.

Tokyo last week unveiled plans to resume whale hunting in the Southern Ocean in 2015 despite an international court ruling that previous hunts were illegal, although it also slashed the quota for the so-called scientific whaling programme.

Joji Morishita, Japan's commissioner to the International Whaling Commission, said the new proposal, which calls for taking 333 minke whales instead of 900, is Tokyo's latest attempt to pursue sustainable whaling according to scientific principles.

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"The whaling issue is seen as a symbol of a larger issue sometimes in Japan ... You might have heard the word 'eco-imperialism'," Morishita said.

"When you go out and ask ordinary Japanese about the whaling issue, they're going to say 'I don't eat whale meat, however, I don't like the idea of beef-eating people or pork-eating people saying to Japanese, stop eating whales."

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The International Court of Justice ruled earlier this year that Japan's decades-old whale hunt should stop, and Tokyo cancelled its Antarctic hunt in response. It carried out a scaled-down version of its Northern Pacific hunt this summer.

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