Faroe Islands debate traditional, controversial dolphin slaughter
Protesters demonstrate with a dead pilot whale in a coffin and posters to denounce the massacre of pilot whales and other cetaceans around the Faroe islands, near the Danish Embassy in Paris, France, Sept. 30, 2010. (AFP Photo)


The traditional slaughter of 1,428 white-sided dolphins in the Faroe Islands has sparked a renewed debate over the practice. The Danish autonomous territory has said that it had begun discussions about the future of its controversial dolphin hunt, with a decision expected in the coming weeks.

A petition with almost 1.3 million signatures calling for a ban on the traditional hunt was submitted to the Faroese government on Monday, the prime minister's office and whale conservation groups told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

At a meeting on Tuesday in Torshavn, the government discussed the conclusions of a re-evaluation that Prime Minister Bardur a Steig Nielsen had ordered in September, after the unusually large slaughter of more than 1,400 Atlantic white-sided dolphins sparked an outcry.

"It was a first meeting. No decisions were taken," an official in the prime minister's office told AFP.

He added that a final decision was expected "in a few weeks," and "several options" were on the table.

In the Faroese tradition known as "grindadrap," or "grind" for short, hunters surround dolphins or pilot whales with a wide semi-circle of fishing boats and drive them into a shallow bay where they are beached.

Fishermen on shore slaughter them with knives.

Every summer, images of the bloody hunt make headlines around the world and spark outrage among animal rights defenders who consider the practice barbaric.

But the hunt still enjoys broad support in the Faroes, where supporters point out that the animals have fed the local population for centuries.

Normally, around 600 pilot whales are hunted every year in this way.

But the dolphin hunt on Sept. 12, 2021 in the Skala fjord was much bigger, triggering an international outcry and pushing the government to reconsider the practice.

Only the dolphin hunt is currently being reviewed, not the entire "grind" tradition.

In the petition, handed over by the Whale and Dolphin Conservation organization, signatories called for the end of the "cruel" practice.