Sea Shepherd Conservation Society
August 2015
Also read Waters of the Faroe Islands Run Red With Another Horrific Grind
Faroe Island whale slaughter residue, June 29, 2015
In a devastating blow to the tourism industry, two major German
cruise-liner companies, AIDA and Hapag-Lloyd, have announced that they have
cancelled tours to the Faroe Islands. The cancellations are a response to
the continued drive hunt and slaughter of pilot whales in the island
archipelago, known as the grindadráp.
The announcements come in the wake last week’s convictions of
Netherlands-based charity, Sea Shepherd Global, and five Sea Shepherd
volunteers, who were accused of interfering in the slaughter of over 250
pilot whales on the killing beaches of Bøur and Tórshavn on July 23.
Sea Shepherd received confirmation of the cancellations from AIDA and
Hapag-Lloyd on Friday.
Director for Environment and Community and Chief Sustainability Officer for
AIDA, Dr. Monika Griefahn, stated that the company has decided to re-route
its cruises, and will now stop in the Harbor of Kirkvall on the Scottish
Orkney islands as an alternative to the Faroe Islands port of Klaksvík. In a
letter addressed to Sea Shepherd, Dr. Griefahn stated, “In the interest of
our crew and our guests as well as for reasons for species protection AIDA
Cruises has decided to stop making port calls to the Faroe Islands until
further notice.”
Negar Etminan, Head of Corporate Communications for Hapag-Lloyd, stated in
an email to Sea Shepherd, “We have already reduced the amount of port calls
to the Faroe Islands. There is only one call of port scheduled for the Faroe
Islands next year. We will refrain from further calls of port to the Faroe
Islands for now and are currently checking possible alternatives for the
scheduled itinerary next year.”
In 2013, AIDA addressed a public letter to the Prime Minister of the
Faroe Islands, Kaj Leo Johannesen, highlighting the company’s concerns with
the grindadráp. In 2014, Hapag-Lloyd addressed a similar letter to
Johannesen, stating, “We protect what fascinates us – that is why our
company and our guests have a strong wish to stop the whaling in the Faroe
Islands and to create a dialogue with you.”
On July 15 this year, Sea Shepherd contacted AIDA and Hapag-Lloyd regarding
their objection letters, calling on both companies to immediately postpone
cruises to the Faroe Islands in the face of the on-going slaughters.
Sea Shepherd also highlighted the change in the Faroe Islands Pilot Whaling
Act and the potential implications these changes would have on AIDA and
Hapag-Lloyd customers travelling to the archipelago. Specifically, Sea
Shepherd notified both companies that, “any person who does not immediately
report a sighting of whales to the district administrator (the sysselmand)
is in breach of the law.”
Local media reports indicate that the international outcry against the
grindadráp, which has intensified as a result of the July 23 slaughters and
the arrest of the Sea Shepherd volunteers, has already resulted in a loss of
at least 6,000 tourists to the archipelago.
CEO of Sea Shepherd Global, Captain Alex Cornelissen, said, “While our
crewmembers have been found guilty of defending pilot whales, the fight
against the continued slaughter of cetaceans in the Faroe Islands is rapidly
gaining momentum. I congratulate AIDA and Hapag-Lloyd for standing-up
against this cruel and unnecessary slaughter, and for sending a clear
message to Denmark and the Faroe Islands that the world will no longer
tolerate this bloody ‘tradition’.”
Sea Shepherd has been leading opposition to the grindadráp since the early
1980s, and is currently in the Faroe Islands for the organization’s sixth
Pilot Whale Defense Campaign, Operation Sleppid Grindini.text
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