Call To Action! Sign Respect For Animals’ Urgent Letter Asking Norway To End This Year’s Barbaric Seal Hunt With A Quota Of 18,548 Harp Seals

The Norwegian government is going ahead with their sickening seal hunt yet again this year. They have announced that the seal hunt can be conducted without an animal welfare inspector onboard. The reason is said to be the risk of COVID-19.

As noted in a statement by Respect For Animals, among the crews to go hunting without inspection this year, are members who have been convicted of animal cruelty after several offenses during seal hunting in 2009.”

In 2010, these crew members received some of the highest fines ever given for animal cruelty in Norway. The men were convicted based on documentation from an animal welfare inspectors report, and video recorded evidence.

NOAH, the Norwegian animal protection group, is gravely concerned about animal welfare during the 2020 seal hunt, and is now demanding that the Government of Norway does the right thing and cancels the hunt.

“To permit seal hunting crews to kill seals without inspectors is nothing but absurd. If the inspector must take considerations to prevent infection from (COVID-19) then of course this should apply to all crew. Considering animal welfare issues, the hunt should be cancelled when an animal welfare inspector is not allowed to be onboard. Hunting seals are not an “essential service,” that could legitimate temporary changes of laws during the corona-crisis,” Siri Martinsen, Veterinarian and Executive Director of NOAH said in a statement. “On the contrary, seal hunting is highly controversial and forbidden in several countries because of animal welfare concerns.”

Respect for Animals, NOAH, and many international animal protection groups are strongly concerned that rules for animal welfare and control are being changed in reference to the corona-crisis, while exploitation of animals continues unimpeded. The seal hunt is 80% subsidized, and should now be stopped to avoid animal suffering.

“I have travelled around the world documenting the different seal hunts, tying to get them banned, and wherever they occur, the horror and brutality is the same. Canada, Namibia, or Norway, the slaughter of seals often for their fur is cruel and unnecessary,” stated Mark Glover, Campaigns Director for Respect for Animals. “Seal hunters with appalling convictions for animal cruelty are being allowed to inflict carnage on innocent, helpless seals, without observation, has shocked people around the world. We urge the Norwegian government to take action and END the seal hunt, NOW!”

In 2015, the Norwegian government decided not to grant subsidies for 2016 and there was no seal hunt that year. Sadly, subsidies were re-established in the following years.

The quota for the 2020 seal hunt is set at 18,548 Harp Seals.

Please sign Respect For Animals’ letter to the Norwegian Embassy urging the government to cancel the barbaric seal hunt in Norway, HERE!

You can help all animals and our planet by choosing compassion on your plate and in your glass. #GoVeg

More on this topic

Popular stories

Breaking! Seismic Blasting Halted In Atlantic Ocean Giving Hope To Critically Endangered North Atlantic Right Whales

Photo by: Canadian Wildlife Federation Yesterday, a status conference on seismic litigation revealed that the industry will not pursue efforts to employ seismic blasting to...

Help Save The Everglades’ Big Cypress National Preserve From Big Oil, Home To Critically Endangered Florida Panthers

Big Cypress National Preserve that lies in the Florida Everglades is 730,000 acres of critical wetlands, cypress forests, mangroves, and other ecosystems that are an important...

Powerful New Video Reveals The Tragic Plight Of Slow Lorises Being Kept As Pets; Support International Animal Rescue’s Campaign Against This Deplorable Trade!

Photos from International Animal Rescue Five years from its initial ‘Tickling is Torture’ video exposing the plight of slow lorises being kept illegally as pets, International Animal Rescue (IAR) has produced a sequel, narrated by actor...