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“During
April, 2005 I visited the East coast of Canada where I bore witness
to the largest wild mammal slaughter on earth. My heart is broken
from the scenes I witnessed.”
By
Mark Glover, Campaigns Director, Respect for Animals
This April I was in Canada where I bore witness, once more, to
the largest wild mammal slaughter on earth. My heart was yet again
broken from the scenes I saw.
Using small inflatable boats I was amongst a team of observers
that gave chase to the sealing vessels that did their best to
avoid having their activities witnessed and filmed. On a number
of occasions the boats actually turned around and rushed towards
us trying to hit us.
The inflatable I was in was actually hit and its propeller was
broken during the collision. We were lucky to survive as the icy
water is so cold it is lethal at that time of year and anyone
falling in would have only minutes to live.
Whereas in previous years I have been struck by the breathtaking
beauty of this place, with the ice and snow stretching to every
horizon, this spring there was hardly any ice at all. This is
terrible news for the seals that depend on the ice on which they
give birth. Thousands of pups, that cannot swim during their first
few weeks, will have drowned but the Canadian authorities took
no account of this.
The seal pups that survived were widely distributed on small pans
of ice and the sealers took aim at them from moving boats with
rifles.
I saw many seals shot and then dive into the water with terrible
injuries. No attempts were made by the sealers to recover these
fatally injured animals which were doomed to die later in agony.

(photo: Respect for Animals)
Others were clubbed to death by sealers that jumped off the boats
on to the pans of ice.
The seal pups looked at their killers expectantly. This was the
first time they had ever seen humans. Was it fear or just curiosity
in the eyes they raised to greet these new arrivals?
I forced myself to watch and take photographs as the sealers smashed
their steel-tipped clubs into these beautiful creatures. It is
the most brutal sight I have ever seen. As was the case when I
visited during the last hunt in 2005 and in previous trips, it
was clear that the sealers had scant regard for even the feeble
regulations that exist. They ran from one helpless seal to the
next clubbing as many as they could, ignoring the requirement
to check to see if an animal was dead before moving to the next.
Many weren’t and were left squirming in agony.
Above: 2005 Canadian seal hunt
I can’t begin to tell you how angry, bitter and powerless
I felt as I watched the slaughter. I vowed in that moment to do
everything I could to protect these beautiful creatures from harm.
But as we were gathering our evidence the Canadian authorities
were preparing their next means of hampering our efforts.
The three hundred foot coastguard ship that had been shadowing
our vessel for most of the day had secretly deployed police and
Department of Fisheries officers on to the sealing vessels.
At a given moment the officers on board the boat we had been filming
made themselves known to us and we were arrested! The reason for
the arrest soon became clear as they seized our film saying it
would be required for evidence.
The arrests were then used as an excuse for not issuing us with
any future observation permits. It was quite clear that they wanted
the hunt to continue without the world watching.
And why were we arrested? We were told that we had strayed to
within 10 metres of sealing activity in breach of our permits.
We absolutely deny this and to date none of us have been charged.
In fact, we had no reason or desire to get closer than 10 meters
to the sealers who had been throwing seal guts at us earlier on
and threatening violence.
Our arrests mark an escalation in the governments and the sealers
attempts to keep witnesses at bay. In 2005 those of us on the
ice were repeatedly subjected to intimidation and threats by the
sealers who charged towards us brandishing knives and clubs. They
did not want to be filmed in their bloody work.
(photo: Respect for Animals)
Again in 2005, when the government officials arrived in their
helicopter they were more intent on keeping me and the other observers
the required 10 metres from the killers than actually ensuring
the hunt was conducted ‘humanely’.
Comically, in response to complaints from observers, one official
went to great pains to measure one of the sealers clubs to ensure
it was within the legal limits – it was!
The fact is that this killing can never be humane and those that
carry it out have little interest in making it so. Their main
interests are speed and not being witnessed.
Respect for Animals is good at campaigning. We have already ended
fur farming in Britain. We have successfully taken on and fought
against the multi–billion pound a year international fur
trade.
And, many years ago, I was involved with the campaign that forced
through legislation that gave a little protection to the baby
‘whitecoat’ Canadian seals.
The Canadians have cynically sidestepped this legislation and
the killing of seal pups is now worse than ever.
Now we have to save them completely from this barbaric slaughter.
But we are up against a powerful and callous foe. The Canadian
Government fully supports the clubbing to death of the baby seals.
They pour millions of dollars into the seal slaughter every year.
They protect the sealers with armed police and helicopters. They
throw every obstacle they can into our path.
Please help us save the seals before it’s too late.
I pledge to devote myself to ending this slaughter.
Back
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Mark
Glover 's journal, reprinted with kind permission from Respect
for Animals
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