home contact us related information

You are here: home >> articles >> solomon islands >> 030707

Solomon Islands

 
  action alerts  
  news articles  
  captivity  
  faqs  
  kid's page  
  press releases  
  solomon islands dolphins  
  vancouver aquarium  
  vancouver park board  
  volunteers  
  home  

Support

  
Site engineered by:

Sydney Morning Herald July 7 2003
By Craig Skehan

Dolphin-nappers set up shop inn troubled Solomons

The Solomon Islands, racked by ethnic violence and political upheaval, is now losing its prized dolphins to a foreign syndicate, which plans to sell them around the world.


Dozens of the wild mammals are being held in makeshift pens after being brought in by villagers responding to word of a $400 payment.

Many have been transported for hours in open boats and one dolphin, which was being trained to perform tricks for prospective buyers, was recently killed by a saltwater crocodile.


Nearly 60 dolphins are in pens on the island of Gela off the capital, Honiara, and locals say they have seen dozens more being held elsewhere. The scheme is believed to involve a German and a Canadian who have links with a small resort on Gela.

In some parts of the Solomons is it taboo to harm dolphins, partly because of an ancient belief that people with magical powers can turn themselves into the animals.

In nearby Australian territorial waters, the catching of dolphins is illegal and there has been a rackdown on such operations in other parts of the Pacific, including neighbouring Vanuatu.

The legal position is unclear in the Solomons, where five years of violence and economic collapse have paralyzed much of the administration.

As well as the dolphin scheme, the chaos has allowed foreign companies to engage in damaging logging and fishing operations without proper monitoring or export controls.

"I am worried about the welfare of the dolphins," Philip Jionisi, of the Solomon Islands Civil Society Group, said yesterday. "I hate to see this. They should be free because the moment we keep them in captivity we are spoiling them."

He said locals working for the foreign operators have said privately that the dolphins are be flown overseas and sold.

The Greenpeace representative in Honiara, Geoffrey Dennis, said that in the past few weeks two interested buyers had inspected the dolphins.


He said there were also fears of environmental damage from the dynamite used to catch the fish needed to feed the dolphins.


This story was found at: http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/07/06/1057430080219.htm

Related Information

Type

County

Website Canada

 

 
Print Top