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South Korea Puts Brake On Building Whale Meat Processing Plant

A crowd gathers in front of a whaling vessel in Ulsan's Jangsaeng-po Port to examine whales waiting to be sold at auction, in this file photo from the early 1980s. Before the whaling ban, whales went under the hammer immediately after they were unloaded from the ships. / Photo provided by Ulsan City.

Seoul (AFP) Jun 16, 2005
South Korea has put the brakes on plans to build a whale meat processing plant, bowing to pressure from environmental groups, officials said Thursday.

South Korea's former whaling port of Ulsan, 400 kilometers (250 miles) southeast of Seoul, had sought to build a 600-million-won (595,000-dollar) plant to handle whales accidentally trapped in fishermen's nets.

South Korea, a pro-whaling nation, stopped commercial whaling in 1986 in line with an international moratorium signed by the International Whaling Commission, which will open a week-long general session in Ulsan on Monday.

But trade in whale meat is legal in South Korea and fishermen are allowed to sell the meat from whales caught in their nets accidentally, known as by-catch.

The ministry of maritime affairs and fisheries said the government had withdrawn support for the project to build the whale meat plant in Ulsan and the city could not go ahead without state funding.

"We could not accept Ulsan's request for state money to help construct the facility due to lack of funds in our budget," a ministry official told AFP, adding the government's decision also reflected "the views of environmental groups."

International environmental group Greenpeace, backed by South Korean activists, set up a protest camp on April 4 at the site where the city planned to build the plant.

Ulsan city officials confirmed that the plant would not be built at least until the end of 2006. The plant was intended as a cleaner place for processing whale meat, currently treated on board ship or at the quayside.

But they rejected Greenpeace's demand that the city pledge in writing not to build the facility for 10 years.

Greenpeace said its members would stay at the camp until Ulsan provided an official document confirming suspension of the plan.

"Greenpeace is suspicious of Korea, because (it) has the second largest by-catch numbers only after Japan," Oh Young-Ae, a local activist based in Ulsan, said.

In most countries fishermen report by-catches of three or four whales a year, but South Korea's accidental catches stand at more than 100 annually, according to Greenpeace.

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Super Predators And Mass Extinctions
Washington DC (SPX) Jun, 16, 2005
Mass extinctions seem to occur on Earth roughly every 26 million years, leading some scientists to propose that they may be caused by rare collisions with comets or asteroids. A researcher in Poland thinks it may be possible that extraordinary predators are at fault instead.







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