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Australia maintains the annual hunts breach Japan's international obligations and plans to bring the matter before the International Court of Justice in the Hague. "I'm glad this season is over and Australia doesn't believe there should ever be another whaling season again," Australian Environment Minister Tony Burke said in a statement Friday. Japan had temporarily halted the hunt on Feb. 10 and said the suspension would last until conditions were deemed safe. But the government decided to call off the hunt after it deemed conditions had grown too risky. Greenpeace Japan points to another reason: It says the country simply does not need any more whale meat. The group said it's not surprised by the government's decision because it received a tip late last year that the whaling season would be cut short. The amount of whale meat in storage has climbed sharply over the last several years. As of December, Japan held 5,093 tons of whale meat in its freezers, according to fisheries agency data. "Actually, this is the voice of the Japanese public, because the Japanese public has decided it does not want to eat whale meat," said Junichi Sato, Greenpeace Japan's executive director. "And that's the reason why the Japanese government had to decide to come back." The industry's practices came under domestic scrutiny last year after the fisheries agency reprimanded five officials for accepting whale meat from a company that operated government-funded whaling from 1999 to 2008. The agency's investigation followed media allegations that whalers and officials were siphoning off meat from the whaling program. Two Greenpeace activists in 2008 stole a package containing whale meat, claiming it was proof of wrongdoing. A Japanese court in September convicted them of trespassing and theft, ordering suspended prison terms while acknowledging murky gift-giving practices among whaling officials. Kano, the fisheries minister, did not indicate whether Japan would resume whaling next season, saying instead that it would "examine" the matter.
[Associated
Press;
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