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Hunters Can Take Up to 325,000 Seal Pups

Hunters Can Take Up to 325,000 Seal Pups
By BETH DUFF-BROWN, Associated Press Writer
58 minutes ago



TORONTO - Canada's contentious seal hunt will soon start, the government announced Wednesday, despite protests by Paul McCartney and other animal-rights activists who condemn the killing of the pups as inhumane.

Fisheries and Oceans Minister Loyola Hearn charged that the media have misrepresented the hunt, and said Canada is committed to ensuring the seals are killed by humane methods.

"Canada's harp seal herd is a conservation success story," Hearn said in Ottawa. "We continue our surveillance and monitoring to make sure that Canada's is the most tightly regulated, closely watched and, above all, most humane seal hunt in the world."

Registered sealers will be allowed to kill up to 325,000 pups in the ice floes off the Atlantic when the annual season opens, up from the quota of 320,000 last year, Hearn said.

Aboriginal and Inuit hunters begin the commercial kill in November in Canada's frozen Arctic waters. The spring leg is slated to begin in the Gulf of St. Lawrence next week and move later to an arc about 30 to 40 miles from Newfoundland.

Hearn said Canada's harp seal population is "healthy and thriving" at nearly 6 million, a threefold increase since the 1980s.

McCartney and his wife, Heather Mills McCartney, took to the ice floes in the Gulf of St. Lawrence two weeks ago to frolic with the doe-eyed pups to garner international support to end the hunt. He called the practice a "stain on the character of the Canadian people."

The Humane Society and International Fund for Animal Welfare have posted gruesome videos on their Web sites that show the pups being clubbed to death, some left choking on their own vomit or being skinned alive.

Hearn said these are isolated incidents and federal marine monitors have verified that most of the seal pups that are killed have lost their fluffy white fur as required by law since 1987 and are quickly jabbed through the brain with picks or shot with one quick bullet.

He said fishing communities of Quebec and Newfoundland, whose livelihoods were devastated when the Atlantic cod stocks dried up in the mid-1990s, earn 25 percent to 40 percent of their annual income by selling the seal pelts and blubber for about $70 each.

The pelts used in the fashion industry are mostly sold to Norway, China and Russia. The United States has banned Canadian seal products since 1972 and the European Union banned white baby seal pelts in 1983.

Last spring marked the final season for a three-year federal plan that allowed sealers to take 975,000 seals _ most of them harp seals between 12 days and 3 months old.

 
Its easy, just pretend they a furry cuddly stuffed animals. Don't let the yelp at the end bother you. It pays great money and you get to work with some fine people.
 
i believe the main reason is economic, the article talks about people earning much of their annual income from the seal hunt

He said fishing communities of Quebec and Newfoundland, whose livelihoods were devastated when the Atlantic cod stocks dried up in the mid-1990s, earn 25 percent to 40 percent of their annual income by selling the seal pelts and blubber for about $70 each.
 
Originally posted by: FoBoT
i believe the main reason is economic, the article talks about people earning much of their annual income from the seal hunt

He said fishing communities of Quebec and Newfoundland, whose livelihoods were devastated when the Atlantic cod stocks dried up in the mid-1990s, earn 25 percent to 40 percent of their annual income by selling the seal pelts and blubber for about $70 each.

Those ignorant fishermen are the ones who dried up the cod stocks, and now they get to hunt seals, inhumanely to boot? I say fvck them. They're probably conservative enough to oppose Canada's welfare system, so don't let them use national resources.
 
inhumanely? they are seals, not humans
federal marine monitors have verified that most of the seal pups that are killed have lost their fluffy white fur as required by law since 1987 and are quickly jabbed through the brain with picks or shot with one quick bullet.

i am sure many people will say that killing them in any fashion, even lethal injection is "inhumane", but for the rest of us, i think their methods are acceptable

if the herds are at 6 million, then this is like 5% ?
 
Originally posted by: mercanucaribe
Originally posted by: FoBoT
i believe the main reason is economic, the article talks about people earning much of their annual income from the seal hunt

He said fishing communities of Quebec and Newfoundland, whose livelihoods were devastated when the Atlantic cod stocks dried up in the mid-1990s, earn 25 percent to 40 percent of their annual income by selling the seal pelts and blubber for about $70 each.

Those ignorant fishermen are the ones who dried up the cod stocks, and now they get to hunt seals, inhumanely to boot? I say fvck them. They're probably conservative enough to oppose Canada's welfare system, so don't let them use national resources.

Sounds like they're doing just fine with the seals.
Hearn said Canada's harp seal population is "healthy and thriving" at nearly 6 million, a threefold increase since the 1980s.
 
I don't have a problem with hunting if two conditions are met:

1. You kill the animal as quickly and painless as possible.
2. You use everything. If you want the pelt, you take the meat as well.

People who hunt for "sport" and don't follow these rules make me absoutely sick.
 
what's 5% of 100%? Five Percent.

They're still killing these baby seals for their economic gains, five percent is a lot to a whole species.
 
Originally posted by: BigToque
I don't have a problem with hunting if two conditions are met:

1. You kill the animal as quickly and painless as possible.
2. You use everything. If you want the pelt, you take the meat as well.

People who hunt for "sport" and don't follow these rules make me absoutely sick.
I've always said, If you want to hunt for sport, go hunt a bear with a pocket knife. Now THAT is sporting.

There is nothing sporting about shooting an animal 1500 feet away from you with a high powered rifle.

 
No there is nothing wrong with the Seal Hunt.

The seal population is incredibly high right now, it is a huge source of income for an area which is dwindling and has incredible economic problems, especially with the decline in the fishing industry.

Yes seals are butchered, yes some of them die quite horribly, but the reality is that it would be no worse to be eaten by a larger predator, nor is it any worse than a slaughter house. Personally, I would rather that the fur industry was stopped completely, but I also am not a bleeding heart.

The fact of the matter is that the sealing industry is portrayed in the worst way possible by animal right's activists, an easy thing to do when you consider that the famed targets are small and fluffy. You don't see the same amount of outcry over the slaughter of barnyard animals.

I'm in the middle of a school project where we are tasked with creating an anti-sealing add campaign, ironically enough, and I am not liking it.
 
Originally posted by: BigToque
I don't have a problem with hunting if two conditions are met:

1. You kill the animal as quickly and painless as possible.
2. You use everything. If you want the pelt, you take the meat as well.

People who hunt for "sport" and don't follow these rules make me absoutely sick.

Agreed. Hunting for sport or money is outright cruelty. Having actually seen footage of baby seals getting clubbed and skinned on the spot, I can honestly say human is one of the cruelest animal on the planet.
 
Originally posted by: BigToque
I don't have a problem with hunting if two conditions are met:

1. You kill the animal as quickly and painless as possible.
2. You use everything. If you want the pelt, you take the meat as well.

People who hunt for "sport" and don't follow these rules make me absoutely sick.

:thumbsup:
 
Before America got wussified Dog fighting used to be a gentlemans sport (e.g suit and tie affiar) seal/mink hunting was'nt even on the radar.
 
I saw this hour long special with Paul McCartney on CNN where he and his wife were talking about the sealing industry.

In a few weeks, they kill 70% of all baby seals.
They club them because it does the least damage to their pelts.
Sometimes they shoot them, but if they don't kill them on the first shot, they just leave them to die, because a second bullet hole dramatically reduces the value of the pelt.
A US animal rights organization saw a baby seal shot and left to die; it took it 2 hours to finally choke to death on it's own blood.
The hunters go in at a particular time of year, before the baby seals are able to move much, and before they can swim. That way they can't get away.
There is a helicopter view of a boat landing on an area full of baby seals. The helicopter is pretty far up, so it's hard to discern the individual actions. But within 30 seconds of the boat landing, spots of red begin to spread until they blot out all the white snow in sight. It is truly horrifying.
These seal killers only make about $1,300 per person for their efforts, they are fishermen doing this in the off season.

There are very few people who actually do this, most of them are old men. I think violence really could be the answer here. Kill a few boats full of seal clubbers with a high powered rifle from afar. See how many of these monsters are then willing to risk their lives for a few bucks.

Cruel bastards, I hope they burn in hell. :|
 
Originally posted by: mrrman
its so cruel...

Agreed. These men get off their boats, with their clubs and pickaxes, and just start hacking away at the baby seals. The seals are too young and weak to even try and run away. The fishermen stand in one spot and kill dozens of seals. Meanwhile, the seals' mothers bark angrily, only to be ignored, for their pelts aren't worth anything. They are left to watch their children be bludgeoned to death, some of them left wounded to die, others taken away, leaving only bloody spots in the snow to remember them by.

Then you watch the interviews with these fishermen and they say "I'm just makin' a living." I'd have no problem killing them one at a time out on the ice. Some snow camo and my competition AR15 would make quick work of them. Aim for their legs, cripple them. Then go and throw them in the freezing water. Leave a note underneath one of the seals they murdered that read "At least your boys got a chance to swim before they died." :|
 
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