EU seal ban challenge rejected in court
The Canadian Press
Posted: Sep 14, 2011 4:44 PM CT
Last Updated: Sep 14, 2011 4:39 PM CT
An EU court has dismissed a challenge of the European Union's import ban on seal products, though several other legal cases are still ongoing. (Andrew Vaughan/CP)
A court ruling in Europe has struck another blow to Canada's embattled seal products industry.
The European General Court, in a judgment released Wednesday, rejected a bid by Canada's largest Inuit organization to challenge the European Union's year-old trade ban on seal products.
The Luxembourg-based court dismissed the group's case, saying the challenge from the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, several seal hunters and industry organizations was inadmissible.
Even though the EU ban exempts the trade in seal products from aboriginal groups, the Inuit say their markets will plummet along with the rest of the commercial industry unless the ban is overturned.
Mary Simon, head of the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, which represents Canada's 53,000 Inuit, said her organization has yet to decide what exactly what it will do in the wake of the decision.
"Inuit are disappointed that the EU did not see fit to rule on the merits of this case, and have dismissed it on technical grounds as inadmissible without a hearing,” Simon said in a written statement.
'Horrible fate'
Rebecca Aldworth, executive director of the Canadian wing of Humane Society International, said the ruling "puts another nail in the coffin" of the commercial sealing industry.
"It's a very important ruling," she said in an interview from Strasbourg, France. "The ban remains in place and seals in Canada and around the world are going to be spared a horrible fate for many years to come."
Aldworth said her group would like to see the industry mothballed and all seal hunters offered compensation.
Animal welfare groups have long argued that the annual hunt off the East Coast has left a stain on Canada's international reputation because they believe the slaughter is inhumane.
"It's time that the Canadian government recognize that the writing is on the wall," said Aldworth, a Newfoundlander who has observed the hunt for more than a decade. "The commercial seal hunt is a dying industry."
In June, as the hunt drew to a close for another year, federal officials confirmed this season was one of the worst since the early 1990s, when the industry struggled to recover from a European ban on white pelts from young harp seals.
The total number of harp seals killed in the 2011 commercial slaughter was about 38,000 — less than 10 per cent of the total allowable catch.
The EU ban was blamed for pushing down pelt prices to between $20 and $30, barely enough for seal hunters to cover the cost of fuel and insurance for their boats.
The Canadian government is moving ahead with its own bid to challenge the ban through the World Trade Organization.
The executive director of the Fur Institute of Canada, Rob Cahill, says the fight to save the industry will continue on another front as well. Another ongoing court challenge is aimed at the EU regulations that implement the ban.
Share Tools
Latest North News Headlines
- Selling caribou meat online may hasten herds' decline: biologist
- Wildlife managers in Nunavut are worried the growing online market for caribou meat may put extra stress on some caribou populations. more »
- Inuvik taxi fares go up $1 today
- Taxi fares went up $1 in Inuvik today, bringing the flat rate to $6. more »
- Japanese 747 waits for maintenance crew in Whitehorse
- A Nippon Cargo 747 airplane is still at the Whitehorse airport after making an emergency landing Thursday. more »
- Canada ranks 3rd last in paid vacations
- Canada ranks third last among economically advanced countries in the amount of paid vacation time it guarantees its workers, a new U.S. study indicates. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Will Rob Ford's supporters leave Ford Nation?
- The growing controversy over a purported video alleging to show Toronto Mayor Rob Ford smoking crack cocaine may be testing the faith of even his most die-hard supporters. But experts say Ford's policies may trump whatever personal issues he's facing, and that his supporters may rally behind him. more »
- Royal Bank pledges not to outsource jobs for cash savings
- Royal Bank has promised it will never outsource a Canadian job to a foreign worker solely to save money. more »
- Neil Macdonald: How serious is Obama about curbing the drone surge?
- In a key speech this week, the U.S. president set out a host of supposed new safeguards for America's controversial practice of remote-controlled rough justice. But as Neil Macdonald writes, the underlying rationale for drone use has not fundamentally changed. more »
- Making The Mandela Tapes
- Producer Robin Benger describes how he obtained broadcast access to interviews Nelson Mandela recorded in the 1990s. A CBC Radio Ideas program on the Mandela tapes airs May 28. more »
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford denies using crack cocaine
- The mayor of Canada's largest city told a packed news conference that he doesn't use crack cocaine and isn't a crack addict. more »
- Japanese 747 waits for maintenance crew in Whitehorse
- Arsonist died in Iqaluit townhouse fire, say RCMP
- Japanese plane makes unscheduled landing in Whitehorse
- Selling caribou meat online may hasten herds' decline: biologist
- Boats collide, killing 77-year-old woman
- Canada ranks 3rd last in paid vacations
- Nunavut government spends millions on overtime
- Inuvik taxi fares go up $1 today
- Police deem N.W.T. woman's death suspicious

