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WHALES AHOY
Five anti-whaling activists barred from Denmark's Faroe islands
by Staff Writers
Stockholm (AFP) Aug 15, 2015


Rhino horns, elephant tusks seized in Vietnam
Hanoi (AFP) Aug 14, 2015 - Police in Vietnam have seized more than 700 kilograms (1,500 pounds) of rhino horns and elephant tusks believed to have originated from Mozambique, state media said Friday.

The haul of prized animal parts was discovered hidden in two containers on board a ship carrying ground stones at the central port of Da Nang on Thursday, Tuoi Tre newspaper said.

"The elephant tusks weighed 593 kilograms and the rhino horn chunks weighed 142 kilograms," the report said, adding that the illegal shipment had come via Malaysia.

The final destination of the shipment was not reported but the boat was scheduled to stop in on Vietnam's northern Hai Phong port.

Communist Vietnam has long been accused of being one of the world's worst countries for trade in endangered species.

There have been a number of campaigns to warn Vietnamese not to use products from endangered animals but they have had little success.

Demand for rhino horn remains high with people mistakenly believing it can cure anything from cancer to hangovers despite an absolute dearth of scientific evidence.

Horns are made from keratin, the same substance that makes up finger nails and hair in humans.

Tusks and other body parts of elephants are prized for decoration, as talismans, and for use in traditional medicine.

The rhino horn trade was banned globally by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) in 1977.

But the trade has flourished in recent years, particularly thanks to demand from Vietnam and China with devastating results for Africa's rhino populations.

There are around just 5,000 black rhinos left on the planet and an estimated 20,000 white rhinos, mostly in southern Africa.

In 2011, the western black rhinoceros, a subspecies last seen in Cameroon, was declared extinct.

Five activists from the militant Sea Shepherd conservation group have been ordered to leave the Faroe Islands after they tried to disrupt a traditional whale hunt in the autonomous Danish province, police said Saturday.

Four were expelled on Friday, and a fifth was to leave Saturday, police spokesman Christian Jonsson told AFP, adding that they were barred from the islands for a year.

A Faroe Islands court on Friday found the five guilty of disrupting the region's traditional "grind" pilot whale hunt, one of the activists said.

During the hunt, which many locals defend as a cultural right, the three-to-six metre (10-to-20 foot) sea mammals are driven by a flotilla of small boats into a bay, or the mouth of a fjord, before being killed by hand.

The whale meat and blubber are consumed by locals and considered delicacies on the archipelago situated between Norway, Iceland and Scotland.

The court found Italian Marianne Baldo, Belgian Christophe Bondue, Frenchman Xavier Figarella, South African Rosie Kunneke and Kevin Schiltz from Luxembourg guilty of contravening the Faroese Pilot Whale Act, Kunneke told AFP.

Sea Shepherd has repeatedly attempted to highlight and stop the whale hunt, launching its latest action in the area, involving two vessels and dozens of activists, two months ago.

The group says 12 activists have been convicted since the start of the year. Around 60 Sea Shepherd activists are still in the archipelago.

Provincial authorities told AFP in an email that they would not "tolerate the disruption of the pilot whale drive in the Faroe Islands, which is a legal, fully regulated and sustainable use of an abundant natural resource."

They added: "Obstructing a whale drive can be dangerous and can put people and property at risk."

The Faroe Islands are home to just under 50,000 people and have been an autonomous Danish province since 1948.


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WHALES AHOY
Faroe court convicts five anti-whaling activists
Copenhagen (AFP) Aug 7, 2015
A Faroe Islands court on Friday found five activists from the militant conservation group Sea Shepherd guilty of disrupting the region's traditional whale hunt, one of the activists said. The five were arrested on July 23 in the Faroe Islands - an archipelago of 18 islands that make up an autonomous province of Denmark - as they attempted to stop and document the annual pilot whale cull. ... read more


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