Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Japanese vote buying is the buzz of whaling meet

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In this March 12, 2010 file photo, Japan Coast Guards officials hold a blue sheet to cover Pete Bethune, captain of the Sea Shepherd vessel Ady Gil, following the New Zealander's arrest or illegally boarding the Japanese whaling ship Shonan Maru 2 in February upon the ship's return at Harumi pier in Tokyo. A quarter-century ban on commercial whaling, one of the world's most successful preservation agreements, could crumble altogether if conservationists cannot persuade Japan to cut back on the tradition it champions. Delegates to a meeting of the International Whaling Commission which starts on Monday, June 21, 2010 in Morocco will consider whether to allow limited commercial hunts if Tokyo stops pursuing whales in a southern sanctuary.

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In this photo taken on June 17, 2010, whale meat restaurant Magonotei manager Tomohiro Akio slices a chunk of lean meat of a whale caught in the Antarctic as he prepares for a sashimi dish at its kitchen in Tokyo Thursday, June 17, 2010. Makoto Ito, managing director of Kyodo Senpaku Co., the company that runs the annual Antarctic hunt, said he didn't think they should be ended, because "we need to collect more data." Japan's refusal to give up its Antarctic hunt puzzles even observers within the country. Current coastal catches, also conducted for scientific research, provide fresher meat and are cheaper.

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Press and members outside the IWC meeting venue in Agadir, Morocco, Sunday June 20, 2010. The IWC, the international body that regulates whaling, will gather for its 62 annual meeting next week in Agadir. The meeting is expected to seek a compromise between pro- and anti-whaling countries, which may include allowing commercial whaling on a limited scale.

Accusations that Japan uses aid money and personal favors to buy votes have quietly circulated for years around the International Whaling Commission, which oversees the conservation of the whales that Japan regularly hunts.

Now, a sting operation by a London newspaper that secretly filmed officials from six developing countries negotiating for bribes has brought such allegations into the open, at least in the corridors of the commission's annual meeting.

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A Moroccan women passes by posters outside the IWC meeting venue in Agadir, Morocco, Sunday June 20, 2010. The IWC, the international body that regulates whaling, will gather for its 62nd annual meeting next week in Agadir. The meeting is expected to seek a compromise between pro- and anti-whaling countries, which may include allowing commercial whaling on a limited scale

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In this April 15, 2008 file photo, Japanese media cover Japan's whaling ship The Nisshin Maru following its return from the Antarctic at a Tokyo pier. A quarter-century ban on commercial whaling, one of the world's most successful preservation agreements, could crumble altogether if conservationists cannot persuade Japan to cut back on the tradition it champions. Delegates to a meeting of the International Whaling Commission which starts on Monday, June 21, 2010 in Morocco will consider whether to allow limited commercial hunts if Tokyo stops pursuing whales in a southern sanctuary.

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In this Feb. 11, 2010 photo released by the Institute of Cetacean Research of Japan, an activist, bottom left, of anti-whaling group Sea Shepherd's ship the Steve Irwin holds a chemical launcher, aiming at the Japanese whaling ship Nisshin Maru during their latest clash in the Antarctic waters. A quarter-century ban on commercial whaling, one of the world's most successful preservation agreements, could crumble altogether if conservationists cannot persuade Japan to cut back on the tradition it champions. Delegates to a meeting of the International Whaling Commission which starts on Monday, June 21, 2010 in Morocco will consider whether to allow limited commercial hunts if Tokyo stops pursuing whales in a southern sanctuary.

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The Sunday Times of London secretly filmed the officials talking with reporters who portrayed themselves as emissaries of a Swiss billionaire wanting anti-whaling votes at the IWC's meeting in Morocco.

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File - In this Feb. 6, 2009 file photo released by Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, Japanese whaling ship Nisshin Maru, right, hauls a newly caught minke whale up its slipway, accompanied by Japanese harpoon ship Yushin Maru 2, while a Sea Shepherd helicopter flies over in the Ross Sea, the Antarctic. A quarter-century ban on commercial whaling, one of the world's most successful preservation agreements, could crumble altogether if conservationists cannot persuade Japan to cut back on the tradition it champions. Delegates to a meeting of the International Whaling Commission which starts on Monday, June 21, 2010 in Morocco will consider whether to allow limited commercial hunts if Tokyo stops pursuing whales in a southern sanctuary. 

The six indicated that any offer from the Swiss would have to top what Japan already gives them. Tanzania's top delegate was quoted as saying he had accepted trips to Japan, where he was offered free "massages" in his hotel room, which he said he declined.

For some of Japan's harshest critics, the Sunday Times catching officials on tape acknowledging they received benefits from Japan was proof of undue influence on the 88-nation commission, which in its most important meeting in decades is considering a proposal for a 10-year suspension of the 1986 ban on commercial whaling.

"Vote buying is Japan's dirty little secret at the IWC," said environmentalist Patrick Ramage, who has been attending conferences for 15 years. He called it "a slow-motion hostile takeover of an international forum." And while all powerful nations try to wield their influence, Japan's "multiyear sustained effort is really quite unique," he said Tuesday.

Japan denies any wrongdoing, and says allegations of vote-buying are meant to "devaluate" Japan's position at the IWC.

"It is national policy to support developing countries," said Hideki Moronuki, of the Japanese ministry for agriculture, forestry and fisheries. "Do you think that kind of ODA (overseas development assistance) is some kind of bribe? I don't think so."

Japan insists its whaling is advance scientific knowledge of whales, creatures about which much remains mysterious. But most of the animals end up as meat products rather than lab specimens, and the Japanese say their continued whaling is a matter of national pride.

The Japanese government builds fisheries, harbors, schools and contributes to development budgets of more than 20 countries that consistently vote in Japan's interests at the International Whaling Commission and are likely to support whatever position it takes on the proposal.

In its latest edition, the paper said the $6,000 hotel bill for the acting chairman of the Morocco conference, Anthony Liverpool, was prepaid with a credit card that the paper traced to Japan Tours and Travel, Inc., based in Houston, Texas. Liverpool is a diplomat from Antigua and Barbuda and its ambassador to Japan.

When asked by the paper about accepting the money from Japanese interests, Liverpool was quoted as saying, "Yes, but there is nothing extremely odd about that."

The whaling commission was created after World War II to conserve and manage whale stocks. Tens of thousands of animals were killed each year until the IWC adopted the moratorium, and now about 1,500 animals are killed each year by Japan, Norway and Iceland. Japan says its killing of hundreds of whales every year is for scientific research.

Influence peddling goes back decades. Birgit Sloth, then a delegate for the Danish government, recalls seeing the chief negotiator of a Caribbean nation pay his fees at an IWC meeting in Britain in the early 1980s with a check drafted in Japanese yen.

"At that time no one paid much attention. Now it's done in a much more hidden way," she told The Associated Press.

Leslie Busby, then working for the Italy-based Third Millennium Foundation, compiled a 95-page report in 2007 on Japan's "vote consolidation operation." She said 28 countries have been recruited to the whaling commission as a result of Japanese aid — including the landlocked African nation of Mali — giving the regulatory agency roughly a 50-50 split between pro- and anti-whaling countries.

Busby said those aid-recipient nations consistently vote in support of Japanese.

"It makes it all meaningless. There's no point to debate the issues because positions are predetermined," she said in an interview.

In her report, Busby reproduces a 2002 letter from Grenada's accountant general asking the former agriculture minister what happened to missing funds paid by Japan in 1998 and 1999. It asked him to assist "with information on Japan's contributions to the Government of Grenada for the International Whaling Commission for the stated period."

A few supporters of the three whaling countries have hunting traditions. But Japan also has regular backing from countries, like the African states, that never had an interest in whaling.

"Japan is doing a lot of things in West Africa. In return Japan asks these countries to support them at IWC meetings," said Mamadou Diallo, a former Senegalese government science researcher who now works for WWF.

"It's a transaction, a sale. 'If I give you this, you give me that.' ... Yes, we can say it's a bribe, because normally our countries are not for whaling."

For developing countries, a vote at the commission may not be a high price to pay. Tiare Turang Holm says whaling is a peripheral issue for her country of Palau in the South Pacific. So voting "becomes an issue of our friends, our development partners."

And Japan is not the only donor country to apply pressure.

"But Japan is blatant about it, and very much ties votes to its support," said Sue Miller Taei, of the Pacific Island Program based in Samoa.

"I have directly seen Japan bully Pacific island states," said Taei, remembering an instance when a senior Japanese delegate led reluctant island delegates into an IWC meeting for a vote. "For a long time those delegates couldn't even look me in the eye."











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