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The International Whaling Commission, which will meet later this month in Morocco, is currently mulling a plan that would effectively allow commercial whaling for the first time since the ban, but under strict quotas. Escalated confrontations between activists from the group Sea Shepherd and Japanese vessels have forced Japan's Antarctic mission in recent years to return home with only half its catch quota of some 900 whales. Sea Shepherd activist Peter Bethune, 45, who boarded a Japanese whaling ship in Antarctic seas as part of a protest in February, pleaded guilty last week to charges including trespassing and destruction of property. If convicted, he faces up to 15 years in prison. Bethune is the first Sea Shepherd arrested by Japan over the conservationists' aggressive campaigning against whaling. Japans' whaling program involves large-scale expeditions down to the Antarctic, while other whaling countries mostly stay along their coasts.
[Associated
Press;
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