As many as 1,000 whales are killed over the summer months
every year
Faroe Islanders have turned the sea red after
slaughtering hundreds of whales as part of annual tradition.
The hunt has been criticised by animal rights
campaigners, who say the ritual is cruel and unnecessary.
As long-finned and short-finned pilot whales swim close
to the shore during migration, fishermen surround the mammals in boats and
dinghies, herding them towards the beach.
The entire pods of whales become stranded, are dragged up
the beach and slaughtered on the sand or in the shallow water.
The hunt, known locally as the grindadrap, draws large
crowds. Many people enter the water to help bring the whales to the sand.
Faroe Islanders are allowed to carry out the annual
slaughter by law, which is partially devolved from Denmark’s government,
although the legality of the practice has been questioned by activists
“Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals'
blowholes before their spines are cut,” the campaign states.
“Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim
around in their family members' blood for hours.
"Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent
creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do," the PETA
campaign continues.
There are around 1 million long-finned pilot whales and
200,000 short-finned pilot whales. Although they are not endangered species,
campaigners say a lack of regulation around such traditions in the Faroe
Islands could see significant reductions in whale populations.
An anti-hunting campaign called Sea Shepherd claims that
up to 1,000 pilot whales are killed every year in the summer months and
although whale meat is eaten by the local people, some of the meat is left to rot.
The conservation society sends a couple of boats to the
Islands every summer to try and prevent locals from herding whales to the
shoreline, but last year five crew members were arrested and their boats
confiscated.
FROM
THE DESK OF ANIMAL RIGHTS WRITERS ASSOCIATION OF NIGERIA.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/faroe-islands-slaughter-pilot-whales-sea-blood-red-north-atlantic-iceland-denmark-ritual-tradition-a7798436.html
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