Stop The Seal Hunt

Photo of the Day


Victory for Seals! EU Bans Import and Trade of all Seal Products.

May 05, 2009

MEPs including C Stilher, G. Wilmott, A McCarthy 40 years ago, the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) was founded with the goal of ending the cruel commercial seal hunt in Canada.

Now reaching that goal is closer than ever.

The European Parliament voted 550 to 49 to ban the trade of seal products within the EU. This decisive measure truly reflects the will of Europe’s citizenry, and slams the door on the sale of seal products in Europe from this inhumane and unsustainable industry.

In achieving this ban, 7 of Canada’s 10 top export markets, representing 85% of total exports are officially closed for business.

In Canada, some sealers have started to close down shop as well, citing poor pelt prices and lack of buyers. On April 16th of this year, only six “longliner” sealing vessels left port to start the hunt in Newfoundland compared to more than 113 ships active only a few short years ago.

Jack Troake, one of Canada’s most outspoken proponents of the commercial hunt, opted to stay home. With pelt prices having dropped to as little as $15 each, this was clearly an easy and wise decision to make.

The implementation of this ban will have a permanent quantifiable impact on the remaining international trade in the fur of these helpless creatures.

IFAW believes it may be the beginning of the end to the Canadian commercial seal hunt. This landslide vote demonstrates an enormous resolve to institute this ban across Europe as quickly as possible.

However this victory is only for one battle, the war continues to be waged and we need your continued support to help us put an end to the cruelty once and for all…we must now shift our focus back to Canada to support the courage of Senator Mac Harb and his efforts to ban the practice in his own country.

IFAW is calling on everyone to help make a final push and tell the Canadian embassy officials in their countries to end commercial seal hunting forever.

The end is in sight, will you take 5 minutes to help the seals? Please visit www.stopthesealhunt.org right now.

IFAW "Club" Holiday Giving PSA

December 11, 2008

The International Fund for Animal Welfare created this PSA to shine a light on our www.animalgift.org holiday fundraising effort...if you're looking to give a gift that matters this holiday season...please consider purchasing a Gift for Animals.

WARNING - GRAPHIC FOOTAGE - IFAW Documents Canadian Commercial Seal Hunt Day 3 Cruelty

April 07, 2008

In what may prove to be some of the most violent footage of the 2008 Canadian commercial seal hunt to date, the International Fund for Animal Welfare has posted this short video of two seal pups clearly in agony as they are attempted to be killed by rifle fire and in the last case a subsequent clubbing.  Please consider donating today to help IFAW end this cruel hunt once and for all.

Children and Politicians at IFAW's Rally to Ban Seal Products

April 03, 2008

Zeehondenactieplein3sm_2

Three Dutch members of parliament and dozens of school children participated in IFAW's campaign for a European ban on Seal products on 1 April 2008 in The Hague, The Netherlands.  The parliamentary members from the liberal, social, and social democratic parties demonstrated their support by climbing up a ladder to place puzzle pieces in the form of European  countries on a large billboard map, symbolizing the European countries that currently  do not have a ban on seal products.  The children cheered and waved European flags in the air as each member took on the brave task of climbing the ladder to the top.

IFAW 2008 Seal Hunt - Photo of the Day - 3.29.08

March 30, 2008

Hunt_drag_shoot_3_30_08This image of a sealer dragging a bleeding seal across the ice while another sealer takes aim at a different pup was taken on day two of the Canadian commercial seal hunt. 

Please consider donating to the International Fund for Animal Welfare's hunt monitoring teams to purchase equipment, fuel and fund research efforts that allow us to make the legal case that this hunt must end. 

Longtime IFAW Supporter Speaks About Animal Welfare

March 27, 2008


IFAW 2008 Seal Hunt PSA - "Animal Welfare" from IFAW on Vimeo.

Longtime International Fund for Animal Welfare Supporter D'arcy Callahan speaks about his 21 years of involvement with IFAW.

IFAW Hunt Watch 2008 - A Beautiful, if Somewhat Sober Day Visiting Seals

March 26, 2008

Itchy_sealThe International Fund for Animal Welfare's J.C. Bouvier filed this report from P.E.I. Canada...

In my role for the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) I'm not usually able to get out into the field for actual campaign activities with animals. However on Monday I and my coworker Ed Butler received an offer to go out onto the ice and visit with the maturing harp seal pups on the ice in the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

After discovering the joys of getting into the emblematic orange "Mustang" suits...Ed and I acclimated quickly to our first helicopter ride...our pilot Martin was both very professional and genuinely concerned that everyone on board was comfortable and enjoying the experience...once we spotted beater seal pups...the ride became a surreal landing into the scene I had only witnessed in video and still photographs...and I don't know that I was truly prepared for the beauty, but perhaps more importantly the reality that these creatures could be violently attacked for profit within the coming hours...

Once on the ice, Ed, the other passengers and I worked to both be respectful of the seals space...while trying to get as close as possible...we looked a bit like seals ourselves as we slid quietly toward a pair of beaters who were basking in the sun.  They were ultimately very patient and kind while we snapped a few photos and stared in a sort of stunned silence...contemplating our lying on the frozen ocean, working to protect these gentle and timid creatures.

More to come...

Hunt Watch 2008 - "Why am I upside down and underwater?"

March 17, 2008

This report was filed by IFAW Seal Communications Officer Katie McConnell...

In preparation for HuntWatch, our team has to complete a myriad of tasks before arriving in Charlottetown, P.E.I.

Most tasks are fairly standard…gather key footage, pack up video cameras and editing equipment, organize information for DFO observer permits, etc., etc. This year however, we added a less conventional task that needed to be completed…an underwater aircraft ditching course! Now you may ask what an underwater aircraft ditching course has to do with seals, but the answer is very simple.

In light of last year’s global warming disaster in the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence, our team had to fly almost exclusively over open water. Not to mention we haven’t been able to land our helicopter on a solid piece of ice since 2005! The team realized it would be in our best interest to have a bit of training under our belts on how to survive in the “unlikely event of a water landing.” Sure, makes total sense on paper, but what does this training actually entail? How about getting into an open-ended piece of fuselage, strapping yourself to a chair, closing your eyes and waiting for the entire thing to be dunked into a swimming pool and tipped upside down underwater? I’m not kidding.

Our observation team headed to Survival Systems, Inc. in Groton, CT to learn how to get ourselves safely out of a submerged helicopter. The staff there was extremely knowledgeable and took us step-by-step through the skills we needed to escape through windows and doors in order to get to the surface of the water. The system was pretty easy to grasp. We were advised to stay seated and strapped to our chairs as the water rushed in through the floor and the simulator tipped upside down.

The thinking here was to keep us in one spot with a constant orientation to the window or door next to us. As long as we stayed in the same position, we couldn’t float around the cabin or lose our way out. After several hours of practice in the pool (luckily it was 80 degrees) and about 5 or 6 escapes, we all felt pretty confident in our aircraft ditching abilities. We now have a lot more respect for the safety precautions we take before flying out over the Gulf as well as invaluable skills in how to save our own lives should we ever be faced with a ditching situation. Of course, as luck would have it, now that we are freshly trained in underwater egress, there seems to be ice in the gulf ;-)

Photo of the Week - Pedro the Tiny Activist

April 20, 2007

Hpim1343_2This photo of Pedro the Tiny Activist was sent in by his owner, who is also an IFAW supporter...apparently Pedro and the supporter often are asked about the cause while out walking...and they do their best to inform and tell people to visit the IFAW.org site. 

It's a true example of every little effort helping to drive momentum for the entire cause.  We here at Headquarters truly appreciate the support of Pedro, his owner and folks like yourself who are helping us spread the world and make this a better world for animals and people.

Search for Hunt Violations Continues.

April 05, 2007

Hunt1_2The IFAW team has been scouting the waters off the coast of Newfoundland for the last day and a half. Yesterday, we had very little luck finding any sealing activity. In fact, there were even difficulties finding herds of beater seal pups. Several concentrations of adult seals were spotted but we were unable to find any hunting activity. Where are the beater seals? Tragically, I worry that many of these younger seals may have perished before the hunt opened.

Our team continued out today to survey the area and we are currently observing 3 sealing vessels. We’re working to document any hunting activity and our photographer and videographer are on-site to capture any instances of cruelty that may occur. This year continues to be very different from other observation events and even the Canadian government is having trouble getting their own officials out on the ice. Yesterday, several fisheries ministers had to observe the hunt from a Coast Guard vessel instead of from the ice. DFO officials concur that this year’s ice conditions are extremely poor and are hindering the sealing industry’s hunting capabilities. In normal years a single boat could bring back anywhere 500 and 700 seals, so far this year sealers are pulling in around 50 or 60. We hope that the government will acknowledge the serious effect that global warming is having on this seal population and that decision makers will ultimately take this man-made strain off of Canada’s harp seal herd.

Take Action

Blogroll

MySpace Friends

About the Bloggers

Promot This Site

Why IFAW?

Why IFAW IFAW has led the fight to stop the cruel slaughter of seal pups since the 1960s, resulting in the import ban of newborn whitecoat seal pelts in 1983. Today, with offices in 16 countries, IFAW is the world's leading animal welfare organization, fighting to save seals both on the ice and through vital scientific and market research.

Spread the Word to Save Seals

Spread The Word Add this site to your Web 2.0 links: delicious.gif digg.gif reddit.png technorati.gif yahoomyweb.png rss.gif

Tell a friend to speak out against the seal hunt.
Copyright ©2007 International Fund for Animal Welfare, 290 Summer Street, Yarmouth Port, MA 02675
A Better World for Animals and People