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Dutch judge blocks dolphin transfer to China by AFP Staff Writers The Hague (AFP) Nov 9, 2021 A Dutch judge on Tuesday temporarily blocked the transfer of eight dolphins, two walruses and two sea lions to a Chinese amusement park after animal rights activists launched an urgent court case. Conservation groups Sea Shepherd and the local House of Animals group dragged a Dutch dolphinarium before the Amsterdam Regional Court to stop the export to the Hainan Ocean Paradise, a theme park currently under construction in southern China. "If you decide to export these animals to China, you are not looking after their welfare" the activists said on the House of Animals website, adding they will be used to entertain people "for commercial purposes". This was also because of the "stress of relocation, taking them out of a familiar environment and because the animals will now be some place worse than they have been before," the activists said. The animal rights groups also opened a case against the Dutch government which authorised the transfer, saying it had a "duty to ensure" the welfare of the animals. On Tuesday a judge granted an interim order to freeze the export until the case against the government -- which had issued export permits -- had been decided. The judge "gave weight to the irreversibility of a possible transfer to China," the Amsterdam Regional court said. "The dolphinarium is therefore not allowed to use the export licenses until a decision has been made," the court said. "We are extremely happy with this judgement and have full confidence that the judges will also rule that these export permits should have never been issued," House of Animals spokeswoman Karen Soeters said. The animals will be "used for commercial purposes to entertain people and that has nothing to do with conservation," she said in a statement. The dolphinarium is expected to appeal the judgement. A full hearing will be now held on November 23 in which judges were set to rule on the validity of the government's export permits. The Dolphinarium in the central Dutch town of Harderwijk is one of Europe's largest marine parks and has drawn millions of visitors since its opening in 1965. Set up to educate the public about marine animals, it however has drawn criticism in recent years from animal rights activists who said the creatures were kept in confined spaces and made to perform for visitors.
Massive whale beaches itself in northern France Calais, France (AFP) Nov 7, 2021 French animal experts said on Sunday they were preparing to conduct an autopsy on a 19-metre-long whale that died after getting stranded at the northern port of Calais. The fin whale, weighing around 15 tonnes, apparently beached itself after getting injured, a rare phenomenon in the area. "It is a female, about 30 years old, who ran aground on Saturday," Jacky Karpouzopoulos of the CMNF animal protection group told AFP. "She was sick but she reached the port of Calais still alive, then she ... read more
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