Campaign Against Shark-Finning in Costa Rica
August 24th, 2010

Issue summery:
Once a shining star on Ethical Traveler’s “Ethical Destinations” list, Costa Rica won acclaim for its policies promoting environmental protection, social welfare and human rights. But the popular destination was dropped from our list when it became one of the world’s main hubs for sex trafficking. Today, Costa Rica is wrestling with another menace: shark finning.
Shark finning is the act of slicing off the fin and discarding the living shark back to sea, where it dies a horrible death. The amputated fins are then exported to Asia, where they are used to make an ominous delicacy: shark fin soup (as journalist John Platt calls it, “extinction in a bowl”). Shark finning is responsible for the death of some 200 million sharks each year—contributing to a 90% decline in global shark populations.
Costa Rican native Randall Arauz (winner of a 2010 Goldman Environmental Prize) has succeeded in getting his government to pass a law forbidding shark finning, which requires that sharks be “landed” with their fins attached. Though the law doesn’t prohibit shark fishing, it slows the slaughter of sharks by limiting by the storage capacity of the offending fishing ships.
Kategorie: Artenschutz, Finning, Petition, Öffentlichkeit |
1 Kommentar »









September 2nd, 2010 um 23:05
Hallo.
Ich mochte mit Ihrer Website http://www.stop-finning.com Links tauschen