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U.S. now objects to IWC Membership for Iceland
Berlin, Germany, 15 June 2003 - Having publicly and privately asserted its
support for Iceland's IWC membership, the US has now gone back on its word
and filed an objection to Iceland's membership. Sad to say, such
duplicitous behavior has become all too typical of the US and its allies in
the anti-whaling camp, all of whom appear willing to sacrifice the IWC's -
and their own - credibility in order to advance their narrow
anti-sustainable use agendas.
Iceland gained IWC membership in an
unnecessary, but thoroughly democratic vote at a Special IWC Intersessional
Meeting in Cambridge, UK, in October 2002. Unfortunately, several IWC
members are less than comfortable with democratic procedures, particularly
when those procedures yield unwelcome outcomes. Consequently, the past
seven months have witnessed an increasingly hysterical campaign designed to
turn back the democratic vote, unseat Iceland and bully the IWC back into
line with the US.
"Democracy is not always triumphant
and there is every reason to believe that the anti-Iceland forces will
emerge victorious", said Eugene Lapointe, IWMC President. "Will
the process stop here? If Iceland can be unseated, then why should the
enemies of democracy stop there? Why not expel Antigua and Barbuda, Japan,
Norway, St. Vincent or any other national that has the temerity to stand up
to the US, UK, New Zealand and their friends in the international axis of
intolerance?" added Mr. Lapointe.
Perhaps the autocrats of London and Berlin
might even want to take a look at the US itself, as it professes loyalty to
the anti-whaling cause while showering its own domestic whalers with new
tax breaks and exempting all of its armed forces from the strictures of the
Marine Mammal Protection Act. Now that might go some way to re-establish a
little IWC credibility. 
For further information,
contact Eugène Lapointe
Switzerland: +41.79.327-3034 or email: iwmc@iwmc.org
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