EU seal ban suspended‏
Sent: August 20, 2010 1:35:06 PM
NOTE: While the vegans, who promote fossil fuel-based clothing for use
in cold weather, are clearly NOT happy [http://blog.peta.org/archives/2010/08/eus_ban_on_seal_fur_suspended.php
], the suspension of the EU ban on Canadian seal pelts is a win for
those supporting natural fibers and sustainable/humane hunts. In
Canada, a recent poll revealed strong support for seal hunting and use
of the pelts for cold weather clothing [http://www.fur.ca/view_news.php?id=111
]
And it is important to note that
a similar ban on seal products, and
all marine mammal products, has been in place in the US since 1972. For background info on utilization management of seals, visit
http://www.furcommission.com/resource/pressMMPA.htm ================
http://www.cbc.ca/consumer/story/2010/08/19/nl-seal-ban-819.html EU seal ban suspended
Inuit leaders question legality of ban on Canadian seal products
Last Updated: Friday, August 20, 2010 | 6:05 AM ET
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CBC News
A harp seal looks toward a seal boat in the Gulf of St. Lawrence near
P.E.I. in March 2005. A European Union ban on seal products has been
suspended after Inuit leaders and other groups challenged its
legality. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)
A European Union ban on seal products was temporarily suspended
Thursday, the day before it was set to take effect, because of a legal
challenge by Inuit leaders.
The Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, representing Canada's 53,000 Inuit, and
other Inuit organizations in Greenland and Norway filed a legal
challenge against the EU's ban earlier this year, calling it illegal
and immoral.
The Canadian Seal Marketing Group and the Fur Institute of Canada are
also involved in the challenge.
The EU's General Court, based in Luxembourg, agreed to impose a delay
on the ban in order to properly consider the legal challenge, saying
the delay was in the "interest of the proper administration of justice."
Federal Fisheries Minister Gail Shea told reporters in St. John's on
Thursday that the European Court of Justice granted an injunction to
several organizations that have launched a legal challenge of the ban,
which was to take effect Friday. (CBC)
"I'm pleased to report that we have just learned this morning that the
petition launched by the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami for an injunction has
been granted," Federal Fisheries Minister Gail Shea announced in St.
John's.
"This means that the ban does not come into force tomorrow."
Inuit leaders were pleased with the news.
"The … [court] has decided there's more time required to properly
review our request," said Mary Simon, president of the Inuit Tapiriit
Kanatami, told CBC News. "To us, that is a very important decision
because it is rare that the European Union court would suspend an EU
legislation."
"To us, it makes it clear that the EU court is taking our legal case
seriously."
Simon expects the court case will be heard in the fall or early winter.
Inuit exemption part of ban
The proposed EU ban does exempt trade in seal products that come from
aboriginal groups, but Simon said the Inuit fear their sales will
still plummet when the ban comes into effect.
"When the market collapses, our market collapses with it," she said.
"This has a very direct impact, and therefore, this Inuit exemption,
or so-called Inuit exemption, won't work for us."
Animal welfare advocates said the temporary court setback ultimately
won't change the fate of the seal hunt.
"The EU court may wish to look more closely at the ban, but the court
of public opinion around the world is clear: the seal slaughter is
uniquely cruel and no market wants the pelts," said Dan Mathews of
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.
"At the end of the day, this is a consumer issue and seal skin has a
worse stigma with the public than herpes."
Ban a disgrace: Harper
Before news of the injunction emerged, Prime Minister Stephen Harper
spoke out against the scheduled ban, saying the federal government is
"very strongly in opposition" to it.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper spoke out against the EU ban on seal
products while he was in Miramichi, N.B., before it was suspended. (CBC)
Harper said it's "flagrant discrimination" against the Canadian
sealing industry, which he described as a sector that employs "hard-
working people who are also of modest means."
"It is a disgrace that they're treated this way in some countries
based upon no facts or information whatsoever. So, we strongly object
to the decision," Harper told reporters at a government announcement
in Miramichi, N.B.
Last November, Canada made an official complaint to the World Trade
Organization about the European ban.
Stockwell Day, who was trade minister at the time, said last year that
Ottawa had formally requested WTO consultations on the ban, the first
stage of the world body's dispute-settlement process.
Day said the regulation, adopted by 27 European countries in 2009, was
a violation of the EU's trade obligations.
Canada, he said, is arguing that the seal hunt is "a legitimate
economic pursuit" and that the EU ban is based "neither on science nor
on facts."
Canada exported about $5.5 million worth of seal products to the EU in
2006 when the price of pelts peaked at over $100, but the market has
been cut in half in recent years with about $2.5 million worth sent to
the region in 2008.
While there are about 6,000 licensed seal hunters on the East Coast,
only a few hundred took part in last season's hunt. About 67,000 seals
were taken — most of them harp seals off Newfoundland — even though
the catch limit was about 350,000.
The Newfoundland government says the industry injected about $24
million into the provincial economy in 2008.
Read more:
http://www.cbc.ca/consumer/story/2010/08/19/nl-seal-ban-819.html#ixzz0xAE8Pjl5