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New Zealands Prime Minister Ethnocentric
Nelson, New Zealand - 17 November 2000:
The President of IWMC World Conservation Trust, Eugene Lapointe, says
the Prime Minister of New Zealand has obviously learnt nothing from her trip to
Brunei.
"International relations call for both respect and understanding, and
Miss Clark has shown neither in criticising another sovereign states rights
to conduct perfectly legal research on whale stocks," Mr Lapointe said.
"In her efforts to act as cheerleader for Greenpeace, she has completely
thrown aside her obligations as a head of Government in understanding and
respecting other countries cultures and traditions."
"Miss Clark is ill-informed. All wildlife management involves some form
of lethal research, and that includes whales. She is labouring under the
misconception that conservation means preservation. All cutting-edge
environmental research defines conservation as sustainable use for the benefit
of both present and future generations," Mr Lapointe said.
New Zealands research into its fisheries is conducted through lethal
means. "As Minister of Culture, Miss Clark is revealing her ethnocentricity
by calling another country, Japan, barbaric."
"If Miss Clark had attended the World Council of Whalers assembly, she
would have heard Aotearoa New Zealands Indigenous Peoples define the
nature and extent of their treaty rights to sustainably utilise whales.
"I have heard Maori people say here that talk is the food of chiefs.
Obviously, Miss Clark is not a chief," Mr Lapointe said.
The International Wildlife Management Consortium is an international
organisation devoted to the promotion of sustainable use as a conservation
mechanism, to the protection of sovereign rights of independent nations and to
the respect of cultures and traditions.
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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