Stop The Seal Hunt
IFAW cautiously welcomes EU ban on seal products but warns that exemptions could allow cruelty to continue

(Brussels – 23 July 2008) – Today’s announcement of a proposed ban on the trade in seal products in the European Union has been cautiously welcomed by the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) as a potential milestone in its founding campaign to end the cruel Canadian commercial seal hunt - but IFAW is concerned that loopholes in the legislation could still allow seal products from this cruel hunt to enter European markets.



Rapid response saves adult Gray Seal in Cape Cod

(Yarmouth Port, MA – 23 July 2008) – The Cape Cod Stranding Network, a Project of the International Fund for Animal Welfare (CCSN-IFAW) and the Provincetown Center for Coastal Studies (PCCS) disentangled a 600 lb gray seal that was swimming just offshore at Nauset Beach in Orleans today.



"Humane" claims by Canadian delegation in Europe refuted by new video evidence from seal hunt

(Ottawa, Canada – 4 April 2008) – As Canadian government officials continue a European tour in attempt to forestall an EU ban on seal products, IFAW (the International Fund for Animal Welfare –  www.ifaw.org) released new video evidence refuting the government’s claims that the humaneness of Canada’s commercial seal hunt has improved.



Canada's 2008 commercial seal hunt starts today – 275,000 harp seal pups are targeted for slaughter

(Charlottetown, Canada – 28 March 2008) –A team of observers with IFAW (International Fund for Animal Welfare – www.ifaw.org) is set to document the commercial seal hunt as it opens today in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Canada.



IFAW documents hunting activity on opening day of Canada’s commercial seal hunt – new bleeding requirement ignored

(Charlottetown, PEI, Canada – 28 March 2008) – Observers with IFAW (International Fund for Animal Welfare – www.ifaw.org) have just returned after witnessing the first slaughter of harp seal pups during this year’s commercial seal hunt.



Cruelty to continue under ‘new’ Canadian seal hunt regulations

(Charlottetown, PEI, Canada – 27 March 2008) – Today, experts with IFAW (International Fund for Animal Welfare – www.ifaw.org) denounced the Canadian government’s claims that a new condition of license will improve the humaneness of Canada’s commercial seal hunt. The so-called ‘new’ regulations make no real changes to the way seals can be killed. They simply call for bleeding to be conducted at some point, “where possible” or even after the seal is finally brought onto the deck of a sealing vessel.



Canadian government calls for the killing of 275,000 harp seal pups despite dwindling markets and international outcry

(Ottawa, Canada - 10 March 2008) - Canada’s Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) has once again decided to ignore scientific advice by setting the total allowable catch (TAC) for harp seals well above what the population can sustain. Conservationists around the world and experts with IFAW (International Fund for Animal Welfare – www.ifaw.org) are appalled that the Canadian government has seen fit to actually increase the quota despite scientific evidence that the population is in decline.



Extraordinary victory for harp seals: Russia moves towards banning the whitecoat hunt

(Moscow, Russia – 5 March 2008) – Today, Oleg Trutnev, Russia’s Minister of Natural Resources drafted a letter requesting the government to bring a full stop to Russia’s hunt for newborn whitecoat harp seals less than three weeks old. This first step in halting Russia’s harp seal hunt was applauded by IFAW (The International Fund for Animal Welfare – www.ifaw.org), which has been working in Canada and throughout the world to put an end to commercial seal hunts.



International Fund for Animal Welfare Report Reveals Impact of Global Warming on Arctic Marine Mammals

Washington, D.C. (January 17, 2008) —Today the International Fund for Animal Welfare (www.ifaw.org) released On Thin Ice: The Precarious State of Arctic Marine Mammals in the United States Due to Global Warming, a comprehensive report commissioned to gauge the effects of unprecedented climate change on polar bears and other ice-dependent marine mammals within the United States.



EFSA report to European Commission finds Canada's commercial seal hunt inhumane

(Parma, Italy – 19 December 2007) – At the request of the European Commission, The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) today released its report on the Animal Welfare Aspects of Seal Hunting, finding there is absolutely no scientific evidence to support the Canadian government's claims that its commercial seal hunt is ‘humane'. Experts with IFAW (International Fund for Animal Welfare – www.ifaw.org) are delighted that the report sets the record straight – Canada's commercial seal hunt is inherently inhumane.



The Netherlands becomes the second EU nation to ban the trade in seal products

(The Hague, Netherlands - 18 July 2007) One small step for seals, one giant step to end the brutal seal hunt. This is the message coming out of The Netherlands with news yesterday that all trade in seal products will now be banned. The decree was made official in the States' Journal. the country's official communication of Dutch laws, decrees & statutes, of July 17th 2007. This decision makes The Netherlands the second EU nation to ban seal products this year.



Canada’s 2007 commercial seal hunt starts today - 270,000 seal pups are set to be slaughtered

(Charlottetown, PEI, Canada – 2 April 2007) – Canada’s annual commercial seal hunt opened today, with total limits set this year for 270,000 harp seals. Canada’s Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) has staggered the start dates this year, opening the hunt in the southern part of the Gulf of St. Lawrence today, while it has announced that the remainder of the gulf will be open for hunting from Wednesday, April 4, 2007. Conservationists worldwide, including experts with IFAW (International Fund for Animal Welfare – www.ifaw.org have condemned the hunt as cruel and unnecessary.



Canada government announces massive hunt of 270,000 seals despite global outcry

(Ottawa, Canada – 29 March 2007) – The Canadian government today announced the total allowable catch (TAC) of 270,000 harp seals during the 2007 commercial seal hunt, due to begin in the coming days. The announcement has drawn sharp criticism from conservationists worldwide including researchers with IFAW (International Fund for Animal Welfare – www.ifaw.org ), who worry that repeated failure by Canadian officials to properly manage the harp seal hunt as this year’s TAC continues to put the population at increased risk of depletion.



Celebrities Mobilize Against Canadian Seal Hunt

(Paris, France - 29 March 2007) – Joaquin Phoenix, Julio Iglesias, Sylvie Vartan, Jane Birkin, Twiggy, Maria de Medeiros, the Canadian Anthony Kavanagh, Didier Bourdon, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Jean-Luc Lahaye: These ten celebrities have raised their voice to alert the French government of the announced massacre of 270,000 seals on Canada's ice floes.



Global warming disaster as thousands of harp seal pups perish: Experts call for annual seal hunt to be cancelled

(Charlottetown, Canada – 27 March 2007) – Thousands of harp seal pups are assumed dead in Canada’s Gulf of St. Lawrence due to the lack of ice floes, which mother seals require to give birth and nurse their pups successfully. Experts with IFAW (International Fund for Animal Welfare – www.ifaw.org ) have been carrying out daily surveillance flights over the region. They report that the Gulf of St. Lawrence, which is the annual birthing ground of hundreds of thousands of harp seals, is essentially devoid of both ice and seals.



Harp seal population at risk due to global warming -- Canadian government urged to call off seal hunt

(Ottawa, Canada – 14 March 2007) – IFAW (International Fund for Animal Welfare – www.ifaw.org) and its 2.5 million supporters worldwide today called on the Canadian government to cancel its annual commercial hunt of hundreds of thousands of seals off of eastern Canada, citing a disturbing lack of ice and ice-breeding seals in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. With temperatures now on the rise, ice conditions are expected to worsen, with just two weeks to go before the world’s largest hunt for marine mammals is set to begin.



Germany moves forward with proposed legislation to ban the import of all seal-derived products

(Berlin, Germany – 26 February 2007) – Horst Seehofer, German Federal Minister of Food, Agriculture and Consumer Protection today announced that Germany will move forward with plans to implement a national ban on the import of all seal products. This decision will make Germany the second nation in the European Union to do so, following Belgium’s national ban on January 27. If passed, the ban will eliminate the German market from the commercial seal trade, putting further pressure on the Canadian government to end the commercial seal hunt.



IFAW welcomes UK Government’s call for EU ban on import of seal products

(London 8th Feb 2007): IFAW welcomes the statement made today by Ian McCartney MP, the Minister for Trade, calling upon the European Commission to propose an EU-wide ban on the import of seal products. The statement comes in response to the Government’s deep concern about the cruelty of the Canadian seal hunt.



Belgium becomes first EU country to ban all seal products – Historic achievement for IFAW’s seal campaign

(Brussels – 25 January 2007) – The Belgian Parliament today voted to implement a national ban on the import of all seal products, making Belgium the first nation in the European Union to do so. The ban closes the Belgian market for the commercial seal trade, sending an important message to the Canadian government that Belgium wants no part of Canada’s cruel commercial seal hunt. IFAW applauds this decision. Over the past years, its EU Office - together with the Belgian NGO GAIA - has been calling for a national ban in Belgium.

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