Source: Agencies |
2008-6-24 |
ONLINE EDITION
OFFICIALS from northern Canada were in Washington yesterday to make an unpopular argument: Let US hunters continue to kill polar bears for sport.
The politicians from Canada's Northwest Territory asked officials of the Interior Department to allow US sportsmen continue to bring back polar bear hides after their hunts in Canada's Arctic region, despite the increased protection now afforded the bear under the US Endangered Species Act.
The United States bans sport hunting of polar bears, but Canada does not. Canada does restrict the hunting season to two months and limits the number of kills.
The recent decision to declare the polar bear threatened under the Endangered Species Act also means American sportsmen may no longer bring home trophy skins, which is what hunting's high-rollers prize.
This "will effectively wipe out our sports hunting industry," Bob McLeod, the Northwest Territory's minister for energy, industry and tourism, said Monday in an interview. He said it will wipe out most of the income for people living in a handful of villages along the province's Arctic coast.
He said hunters, mostly from the United States, spend an estimated US$1.6 million annually during the polar bear hunts, much of which goes into the economies of the isolated villages where the hunts are organized and concentrated.
McLeod said people who live in the far north know about global warming and have seen the permafrost melting, the ice pack shrinking and seasons changing. "We are experiencing the effects of climate change," said McLeod.
But while the polar bear may have become a symbol of global warming, McLeod insists continued hunting and protecting the species can go hand in hand. The hunts are closely controlled, with 40 permits for one bear each issued per season.
"The bottom line is that people rely on this. This is income for the whole year," said Jackie Jacobson, who represents the far northern area in the provincial legislature.
A NEW case of mad cow disease has been confirmed in Canada, its 13th case since 2003. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency said yesterday it is investigating where the infected cow was born in British Columbia....
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