Fishermen killed 83 dolphins
2007-07-18 12:59
Sao Paulo, Brazil - Brazilian fishermen were captured on video killing 83 dolphins and joking about their illegal haul, Brazil's Ibama environmental protection agency said on Tuesday.
The video obtained by an Ibama researcher and broadcast by Globo TV showed the fishermen netting the dolphins, which suffocated because they could not surface to breathe.
The dead dolphins were then hauled from the sea and piled on the boat's deck. Fishermen on board are seen laughing after someone said, "Everyone's going to jail after this filming!"
International dolphin advocates who saw the video said they were appalled and Ibama announced it will try to impose fishing restrictions along parts of Brazil's coast where dolphins are common.
The researcher was contracted by the agency to monitor catches of other fish in the area where the dolphin kill took place off the coast of Amapa state, near where the Amazon River flows into the Atlantic Ocean.
No one has been charged or fined because authorities were still trying to identify the fishermen caught on video, Ibama said in a statement.
The agency said the video was not available to be copied by other media outlets because it was being transported to the capital of Brasilia for the investigation.
After they are identified, "they will suffer the appropriate sanctions", Ibama said.
It was not immediately clear whether the video of the dolphins being killed was made by the researcher or a crew member.
Fishermen who illegally snag dolphins usually sell the meat to other boats to use as bait to catch sharks, Globo TV said.
The images came as a surprise to groups working to protect dolphins around the world.
"Brazil has strict laws to protect whales and dolphins in their waters, and they are very clearly being abused," said Claire Bass, programme manager for marine mammals with the London-based World Society for the Protection of Animals.
"Using nets to kill these extremely sociable and intelligent animals by drowning them is completely diabolical."
Dolphins are also caught off the coast of Africa for shark bait, she said.
Emma Butler, spokesperson at Britain's Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, said she thought the Latin America practice of killing dolphins to use as bait had been "consigned to history".
"It is very regrettable that it appears this is not the case, as Brazil has an otherwise good reputation of protecting its dolphins and whales," she said.
- AP