Gruesome photos:

<<http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_833468.html>>

Dolphin massacre turns sea blood red 

Animal activists have released a video of Japanese fisherman hacking to
death dolphins they had trapped at a small port.



An American anti-whaling group trying to stop the massacre took footage
of the recent hunt that shows blood-filled coves and several dead
dolphins being brought ashore in boats.



The tape, shot by the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, graphically
captures the end of a hunt, in which fishermen pound on the water,
causing waves that confuse the mammals' sense of direction, and then
corral dolphins into small coves where they can be more easily killed
with sickles.

Though subject to government-set quotas, the hunts are not banned under
Japanese law and are not subject to international regulations because
they are done near the shore.

Several dead or dying dolphins can be seen on the boats, bleeding
profusely, in the footage. Activist Nik Hensey said: "It's a wholesale
slaughter, which results in immense suffering for these animals. It's a
sight that one just can't imagine."

The mayor and officials in Taiji refused to comment, but a fisherman's
union representative said the kills are conducted as humanely as possible
and pointed out the hunts have been part of local culture for 400 years.
Hunting dolphins is not banned by the International Whaling Commission.

Fishermen in Taiji regularly conduct dolphin hunts during the October to
April season. They have caught more than 60 striped dolphins so far this
year under the government quota system. The meat is usually canned and
sold in supermarkets.

But because of international pressure for an end to the killing of
dolphins and the bloodiness of their hunting method, fishermen here have
tried to keep out of the public eye. They do not permit videos of their
hunts, refuse on-the-record interviews and have put barriers along the
shoreline to discourage cameramen.

The Sea Shepherd activists said they managed to get the video by camping
out in the town for several weeks. Three activists from the
California-based conservation group were briefly detained by Japanese
police after trying to stop a dolphin hunt and scuffling with a fisherman
earlier this month.

The activists - a Briton, a Canadian and an American all in their 20s -
were held for about nine hours of questioning before being released. They
weren't charged with any crimes. Japan is one of the few major fishing
nations that continues to support the hunting of whales and dolphins.

� Associated Press
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