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Author Frequently Asked Questions About Canada's Seal Slaughter
Old Codger

2008-03-29, 1:25 pm

Frequently Asked Questions About Canada's Seal Slaughter
http://www.furisdead.com/feat-sealhunt-faq.asp

How Many Seals Are Killed Annually?

In 2005, the government quota for the number of seals who could be
killed was 320,000, and in 2006, it was raised by 5,000 because of
government reports that the seal population is "flourishing." However,
scientists argue that the Canadian government failed to take into
account changes in the environment, like food availability, toxins,
and global warming (which may adversely affect the populations of harp
seals, because they give birth on ice floes) when setting
"sustainable" hunting quotas.

Are Baby Seals Still Being Killed?
It is legal to kill seal pups when they are about 12 days old, or as
soon as they have molted their white natal fur. During last year's
hunt, almost all the seals killed were 3 months old or younger. Many
had not learned how to swim or eaten their first solid meal. They are
helpless and have no escape from their violent end.

How Are the Seals Killed?
Sealers bludgeon seals with clubs and "hakapiks" (clubs with a metal
hook on the end), drag conscious seals across the ice floes with boat
hooks, and toss dead and dying animals into heaps and leave their
carcasses to rot because there is no market for their meat. Seals are
also shot, but bludgeoning is preferred, because pelt buyers deduct
money for every bullet hole in a seal's skin. Veterinarians who
studied a past hunt concluded that the hunters failed to comply with
Canada's basic animal welfare standards and that 42 percent of the
seals appeared to have been skinned alive.

Read an eyewitness account from last year's hunt. Rebecca Aldworth, a
native Newfoundlander, who for years has worked to stop the seal
slaughter, described this scene during last year's hunt:

"A movement catches my eye, and I realize with horror that a clubbed
baby seal is still conscious. She is writhing around on the ice in
pain, moving her flippers. She lies next to another seal who has been
killed, vacant eyes staring up, blood already frozen in the ice under
her mouth. It is a macabre scene—the dead and the dying huddled
together here in the rain."
Aldworth says that the seal "is trying to crawl and making anguished
sounds. … She is trying so hard to live, and I know there is no hope
for her. She has her eyes tightly shut, as if to keep out the sight of
the dead seals around her."

Do Harp Seals Contribute to the Depletion of Cod Populations?
The scientific community has concluded that the cause of the depletion
of fish stocks off Canada's East Coast is human over-fishing. Blaming
seals for disappearing fish is a convenient way for the fishing
industry to divert attention from its irresponsible and
environmentally destructive practices. Harp seals, who are the primary
target of the hunt, eat many different species-—only 3 percent of a
harp seal's diet is commercially fished cod—and they also eat many cod
predators.

Is the Seal Hunt Necessary for Canada's Economy?
The Canadian fishing industry is propped up by millions of dollars in
subsidies every year. Local fishers make one-twentieth of their income
from seal hunting and the rest from commercial fisheries. Even in
Newfoundland, where 90 percent of sealers live, revenues from the hunt
account for less than 1 percent of the province's economy. Nor is
sealing a livelihood for native tribes; most sealers are commercial
fishers who use large boats to break through the ice to reach the baby
seals.

International boycotts in response to the slaughter further weaken the
"economic" argument. Italy and Greenland recently banned imports of
seal pelts, and more than 400 restaurants and companies have pledged
to boycott some or all Canadian seafood until the seal hunt is ended.

You Can Help
Write to the Canada Tourism Commission and tell it you will not visit
Canada as long as the bloody seal hunt continues:

Michele McKenzie
President and CEO
Canada Tourism Commission
55 Metcalfe St., Ste. 600
Ottawa
Ontario K1P 6LS
Canada


Boycott all fur. As long as there is a demand for fur-trimmed jackets,
fur boots, and fur coats, seals will continue to be beaten bloody on
the ice.



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