"The Animal Detectives has uncovered dirty business in the Arctic, announces the
BBC Wildlife Magazine in its April edition." But the EIA were not the first to tell
the world about whale meat fed to foxes in Arctic Russia. It was an danish
journalist - and an Inuit organisation.
At the UNCED Conference in Rio, the Inuit Circumpolar Conference distributed
the booklet "Inuit Whaling" which contained an article by the Danish
environmental journalist, Erik Sander, which had earlier appeared in the magazine
Arctic. The opening paragraph reads: "Thanks to subsistence hunting quotas for
aboriginal people, the operators of fur farms in Russia's Chukotka never have to
worry about what to feed their charges." Sander's article informed the
environmental community present in Rio that between fifty and seventy grey
whales are caught every year in addition to 300 to 400 walruses and perhaps as
many as 1000 seals of various species.
"Part of each whale winds up in fifty-gallon cans as whale oil, processed in an
officially "non-existent" shore-based whaling station. But only a tiny portion of the
meat from the thirty-ton greys is used as food for human beings - the ostensible
reason for harvesting the whales at all", writes Sander. He contacted the IWC for a
comment and reports that "the IWC is not concerned that this commercial use of
whale meat violates the principle of subsistence quotas". But Sander himself is
concerned, even though he points out that the harvest level is not a threat to the
grey whale stock. "Carried out in the guise of subsistence hunting, the grey whale
slaughter casts a long shadow over the legitimate harvest practises of aboriginal
people in Russia and throughout the circumpolar world", concludes Sander, and
places the responsibility with the communist bureaucracy in Moscow who
conceived the idea of setting up a fox farming industry in Chukotka.
Also for the record: the High North Alliance newsletter, High North News,
published the Sander story back in 1992.
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