8 Jul 2014

Greens say PM soft on whaling

7:32 pm on 8 July 2014

The Green Party has accused the Prime Minister of taking a "softly-softly" approach towards the Japanese, which will only embolden their whaling efforts, it believes.

John Key held talks with his Japanese counterpart, Shinzo Abe, in Auckland on Monday.

The International Court of Justice ruled in March that Japan's whaling programme was illegal.

John Key had been accused of going easy on Japan over whaling.

Shinzo Abe and John Key. Photo: AFP

Mr Key said Mr Abe told him Japan is exploring ways to resume whaling within the parameters of the court's ruling. He said he stressed that New Zealand was opposed to whaling of any kind.

But the Green Party said Mr Key has done the "absolute bare minimum" to express New Zealanders' abhorrence at the slaughter of whales.

MP Gareth Hughes said Mr Key should've threatened to use all diplomatic options, including trade sanctions, if Japan persists with whaling. He said Mr Key's approach will embolden Japanese whalers in their efforts to find another legal loop-hole.

"Here we have the Prime Minister of a whaling nation coming down to one of the most staunchly pro-whale-conservation countries and he came away essentially with a slap on the wrist with a wet bus ticket."

Mr Key said New Zealand will wait to see what Japan does first before deciding what, if any, action to take. He said there may be little the Government can do to stop Japan resuming some form of whaling.

"If they were undertaking whaling that was truly scientific as defined by the International Court of Justice, then we might be limited in what we can do, but they would have to meet that criteria and we'd need to review what their programme looks like."

Labour leader David Cunliffe and the party's foreign affairs spokesperson, David Shearer, also met Mr Abe on Monday afternoon.

Mr Shearer said they echoed the Mr Key's message that New Zealand opposed all whaling.

Mr Abe flew from Christchurch to Canberra on Monday afternoon and would meet with Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott and address a joint session of Australia's Parliament on Tuesday.