The Makah, a tribal nation on the Olympic Peninsula, have cleared the biggest hurdle that has blocked their tribe’s traditional practice of whaling for nearly two decades.On Thursday morning, a waiver for the Marine Mammal Protection Act from the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration was posted to the federal registry, bringing the Makah Tribe one step closer to a hunt. It’s a decision that will be both celebrated and protested.
"From the Faroe Islands to Iceland, from Japan to Norway, Sea Shepherd’s opposition to whaling is categorical and uncompromising." Hundreds of individual commenters both within, and outside, of Washington sounded off during the process the Makah underwent to get a hunt approved.The groups that stopped protesting the hunt, also drew attention.Groups including The Nature Conservancy and Sierra Club that once opposed a hunt, wrote letters in support of the tribe.
The series of events, was considered closed in March, 2014 – the agency declared that changes in the whale’s traditional feeding grounds triggered the events, which had since been closed.The overall population, however, of the Eastern North Pacific gray whales remain above 1994 numbers when the species was delisted from it’s previous designation as an endangered species under the Endangered Species Act.
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