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Greenpeace urges Australian PM to lobby Japan on whaling

by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) Dec 20, 2007
Greenpeace on Thursday called on new Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd to contact his Japanese counterpart Yasuo Fukuda and demand a halt to whaling in waters off Antarctica.

Greenpeace's Australia Pacific chief Steve Shallhorn said Rudd, who made campaign pledges to keep Australia strongly opposed to whaling before his centre-left Labor Party won power last month, needed to become personally involved in the issue.

"There's still time, this issue is developing, and I think it's appropriate for the Australian prime minister to pick up the phone and talk to the Japanese prime minister," he told reporters.

Shallhorn, however, welcomed Australia's plan, announced Wednesday, to send an unarmed customs vessel and an aircraft to the Southern Ocean to monitor the Japanese whaling fleet and step up diplomatic efforts to end the cull.

The fleet set off from Japan last month on a mission to hunt around 1,000 whales, including endangered humpback and fin whales.

"I think the point could be made even more forcibly of Australia's opposition to whaling in the Southern Ocean if it's a head of government to head of government communication," Shallhorn said.

Shallhorn also claimed Japan was planning to build a new whaling factory ship with the capacity to double the nation's whale kill.

The existing whaler "Nisshin Maru" was temporarily disabled in a fire that killed a crew member earlier this year and Shallhorn said a Japanese fisheries industry newspaper had reported a new vessel was being considered last May.

An official at the Japanese Fisheries Agency's whaling division denied there had been a decision to replace the whaler.

Meanwhile, foreign ministry officials in Japan on Thursday denied striking a deal with the United States to drop plans to hunting humpback whales in this year's cull.

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Australia warns deaths possible if Japan whalers, protesters clash
Sydney (AFP) Dec 19, 2007
Australia on Wednesday urged Japanese whalers and environmental activists heading for a showdown in the Southern Ocean to show restraint, warning deaths could occur if anything went wrong.







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