Whale Management:
The Key To A Balanced Global Ecosystem
by Eugene Lapointe
10 April 2000: For
whales to survive and thrive, the end goal that should be at the heart of every
vote by every delegate to the International Whaling Commission (IWC) and CITES,
is adherence to a simple principle: whales must be part of the process, not kept
apart from the process of securing a balanced global ecosystem.
The NGO and
"like-minded" nations’ position that humans must assume a total
hands-off relationship with whales flies in the face of sound and scientific
resource management. Global biological diversity is important to a balanced
ecosystem. It demands that individual species not be allowed to crowd out or
trample other species and resources within their habitat.
Yet, the extreme NGOs and
"like-minded" nations such as the U.S. and Great Britain appear to be
oblivious to that fact by virtue of their resistance to any active management
system involving whales. They have no concern for the protection of biological
or cultural diversity among humankind. And their refusal to recognize the
validity of the desire by island, coastal and other whaling nations to feed
their people something other than Western hemisphere fast or processed foods is
cultural elitism at its worst.
Further, if the extreme animal
rights and environmental NGOs truly wished to help whales and other marine
species, they would spend the untold millions they collect for those purposes on
finding real solutions to the real problem threatening whales and marine
species, namely pollution. They may complain about pollution but they do nothing
to stop it.
IWC as an institution has a
noble mission, to regulate whaling in an economically and environmentally
sustainable fashion. That it is held hostage by NGOs and major nations with
agendas other than IWC’s chartered mandate should not influence CITES’
delegates to reward or ratify such organizational usurpers with their votes.
CITES delegates to COP 11
should decide upon the merits of the whale proposals based upon CITES’
criteria and whether or not the species in question are currently threatened
with extinction by virtue of international trade pressure. To do otherwise
undermines the right of all marine species, including the whales, and the right
of humans to exist in the give and take flux of the truly biologically diverse
and balanced ecosystem we call earth.Ť
For further information,
please contact
Eugene Lapointe, IWMC President,
Former Secretary General of
CITES (1982-1990)
Tel/Fax: +1(727) 734-4949
or Email: iwmc@iwmc.org
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