Showing posts with label seal hunt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seal hunt. Show all posts

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Parliament suggests athletes wear seal skin

Not likely to happen, but motion passes unanimously to use Games to promote seal hunt.

Canada's Olympic athletes will be wearing seal skin on their 2010 uniforms to protest an international ban on the product – that is, if the country's parliamentarians have their way.

The federal Parliament voted Wednesday to use the Vancouver Games to protest a European Union ban on seal products.

Parliamentarians from all parties agreed unanimously to a motion from the Bloc Quebecois that says the Games should be used to promote products from the seal hunt.

The motion suggests one possibility: that Canada's Olympic uniform include at least one seal product, likely skin.

Fisheries Minister Gail Shea applauded the idea, while wondering whether it might be too late.

"I would imagine the Olympic clothing is all designed and probably made by now," Shea said.

"But I think it's a good symbolic suggestion – to add something to the outfit of our athletes. I think it would be a good statement for the Canadian sealing industry, and Canada's support of it."

Parliamentary motions are non-binding on either the government or the Canadian Olympic Committee, but are an expression of the will of Canada's elected politicians.

The European Parliament voted massively in favour of a seal ban, which could have a dramatic impact on Canadian hunters and exporters.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has said he does not want the ban to scuttle separate talks on Canada-EU free trade.

But Canadian lawyers are already considering a legal challenge, while the EU council of ministers considers whether to implement the ban.

Bloc Quebecois Leader Gilles Duceppe said the Canadian government was outmanoeuvred on the public-relations front and that it should have been more aggressive defending the seal hunt.

Duceppe singled out one country that had no business lecturing Canada on animal rights: Spain, where fights with bulls in front of cheering spectators is a national sport.

"I find it completely abnormal to see protests (against the seal hunt) in Spain – the country that holds the bullfights," Duceppe said.

"We need a campaign. Our adversaries conducted one heck of a campaign, and Canada did not conduct a major one on the promotional level. ...

"The Olympics aren't a trivial thing. We could use this event to shed light on this, but we need to use other events, too."

Duceppe shot back at one questioner who asked whether Olympic athletes might bristle at the idea of being forced to wear animal pelts to make a political statement.

"I don't know what my shoes are made of – but if they're not made out of plastic, they're not made out of straw, they come from an animal."

Is this the sort of nonsense our elected officials spend there time on while our economy is in shambles, people are losing there homes, people are out of work, and more losing there jobs left and right every day? GET TO WORK!!!!
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Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Inuit seal hunters exempt from proposed new rules



To follow up on a posting I did on December 29th 2008, It appears that Inuit seal hunters in Nunavut won't need to worry about the rule changes being proposed by the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans, an official says.

The new regulations, quietly posted in a government publication over the weekend, propose banning the use of a traditional hakipik — a spiked club — on seals over one year old unless they had been shot first with a firearm.

The rules would also force Canadian sealers to ensure the mammals are dead before hooking and skinning them.

But Barry Rashotte, director general of resource management for DFO in Ottawa, reported on CBC News that "the proposed rules apply only to sealers hunting with commercial licences, not to beneficiaries of land claims or those hunting for cultural or subsistence reasons".

"The current regulations exempt in Areas 1 to 4 — which is basically southern Labrador north — it exempts Inuit and Indians and beneficiaries of land claims and residents of the area from holding a licence to fish for food, social or ceremonial purposes," Rashotte said Tuesday.

"Whereas in the southern areas, you need a licence to do that."

Stakeholders have 30 days to comment on the proposed new rules.

The department will then decide whether to incorporate those comments into the proposed rules before making them official.

Rashotte said the goal is to implement the new rules before the commercial seal hunt on Canada's East Coast begins in March, and before the European Union imposes a ban on importing seal products.