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Japan started its annual scientific hunts along its northern coasts on Thursday, aiming to catch up to 60 minke whales until early June. However, some criticized the proposed limits on minke hunts, which would be about half of Japan's current quota from research whaling. Agriculture Minister Hirotaka Akamatsu said Tokyo would "persistently continue negotiations" to address this "gap." But the proposed cap isn't much different from Japan's actual catch of minkes in the Antarctic because Japan's annual whaling expedition has been disrupted by ships from the conservationist group Sea Shepherd. Japan's catch from the Antarctic has fallen to about 500 whales in recent years. New Zealand Foreign Minister Murray McCully said the IWC's proposal does not deliver what New Zealand wants
-- that it must be significantly better than the status quo and meet the country's commitment to end whaling in the southern ocean. "The catch limits proposed in the southern ocean are unrealistic. The proposal to include (endangered) fin whales in the southern ocean is inflammatory. New Zealanders will not accept this," he said in a statement. On the front lawn of New Zealand's Parliament, about 100 Greenpeace anti-whaling protesters Friday held black whale-tail placards aloft with "RIP?" written across them in white letters. The commission was formed in 1946 to deal with whaling issues and has 88 member countries.
[Associated
Press;
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