World

Backlash over dolphin, whale hunting drives Faroe Islands to relook practice

Traditional Sept 12 culling sparks outcry on social media over photos of over 1,400 slaughtered animals

Updated 2 years ago · Published on 17 Sep 2021 7:20AM

Backlash over dolphin, whale hunting drives Faroe Islands to relook practice
Pilot whales (pic) and white-sided dolphins are hunted in the northeast Atlantic in an apparently sustainable exercise by the Faroese, but the culling this year took an unusually long time due to the sheer number of animals herded to beach for slaughter. – AFP pic, September 17, 2021

COPENHAGEN – The Faroe Islands, an autonomous territory of Denmark, said yesterday it will take another look at the practice of dolphin hunting after the slaughter of more than 1,400 of the mammals earlier this week sparked an outcry.

“The government has decided to start an evaluation of the regulations on the catching of Atlantic white-sided dolphins,” Prime Minister Bardur a Steig Nielsen said in a statement. 

“Although these hunts are considered sustainable, we will be looking closely at the dolphin hunts, and what part they should play in Faroese society.”

The comments come in the wake of an outcry over the culling of more than 1,400 dolphins on Sunday, in what was said to be the single biggest hunt in the North Atlantic islands.

Traditionally, the Faroe Islands – which has a population of around 50,000 – hunt pilot whales in a practice known as “grindadrap”, whereby hunters first surround the whales with a wide semi-circle of fishing boats and then drive them into a bay to be beached and slaughtered.

Normally, around 600 pilot whales are hunted every year in this way.

But photos showing more than 1,420 Atlantic white-sided dolphins in a fjord near Skala in the centre of the islands on Sunday sparked outrage on social media.

“It has long been recognised internationally that pilot whale-hunting in the Faroe Islands is sustainable and that the number of pilot whales in the northeast Atlantic is abundant,” the government statement said.

However, the situation on September 12 was “exceptional” in terms of the actual numbers, which meant that the culling took an unusually long time, the government said.

Sea Shepherd, a charity that campaigns against the hunting of whales and dolphins, has described the “grind” as barbaric.

“If we have learned anything from this pandemic is that we have to live in harmony with nature instead of wiping it out,” the NGO’s chief Alex Cornelissen said in statement yesterday. – AFP, September 17, 2021

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