The Politics and Propaganda of the Seal Hunt
The Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) is Canada's Central Propaganda Arm in Promoting Sealing

Sealer clubbing seal. (c) IFAW |
The DFO manages the seal hunt (which it refers to as the 'seal fishery') and true commercial fisheries, recreational fisheries, and indigenous fishing and sealing. It promulgates rules and regulations for sealers and is tasked with enforcing those rules. However, the DFO has failed to lay charges in hundreds of cases of violations of seal hunt regulations that were documented by independent observers (including those from IFAW and HSUS).
As the manager of fisheries, the DFO created and enforced regulations that eventually led to the collapse of the North Atlantic cod fishery. The DFO has been cited for mismanagement of this and other fisheries. Read more about DFO failures here.
The DFO's scientific research has also been criticized. "It is no good at all looking at fin fish and ignoring the rest of the ecosystem; it is especially useless to look at cod and haddock as if they are not related to the rest of the ocean. That science failed. It failed miserably, not because the scientists did not do their job but because of the context, because of trying to operationalize a science that was not actually rooted in all of the things it needs to know." Read more about this critical look at the DFO here.
From IFAW: More Than 660 Probable Seal Abuses Caught on Tape
"IFAW has submitted video evidence of more than 660 probable violations of Canada’s Marine Mammal Regulations to the Department of Fisheries and Oceans. These abuses include skinning or bleeding live seals, stockpiling dead and dying animals, dragging live seals across the ice with sharpened steel hooks and shooting seals and leaving them to suffer. To date, not a single charge has been laid in response." |
It is in this context that the DFO has created a political and propaganda campaign to promote sealing. This campaign, paid for by Canadian taxpayers, involves DFO propaganda ministers, such as Phil Jenkins, opinion polls of Canadians, pressures on members of Parliament, trade missions, and challenges to trade bans.
Do Canadians Support Sealing?

Whitecoat harp seal pup. (c) IFAW |
According to a poll sponsored by the Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans, most Canadians support the seal hunt. According to polls conducted by the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), a large majority of Canadians oppose the seal hunt.
What accounts for the difference? The DFO poll asked the following two questions:
Using a scale of strongly agree, somewhat agree, somewhat disagree, strongly disagree, please tell me whether you agree or disagree with the following statement: Hunting animals for commercial purposes is an acceptable practice, when it is carried out in a humane manner?
Under the current federal policy, seal hunting is only permitted under the following conditions: no nursing seals are hunted, the hunt is done in a humane manner and quotas are set to ensure that seal populations are sustained. In general, would you say that you strongly support, somewhat support, somewhat oppose or strongly oppose the current policy?
The first question does not mention the seal hunt, and the second question includes conditions that do not exist in the real seal hunt.
On the other hand the 2009 IFAW poll asked several questions, including:
Question: As you may know, there is currently a commercial seal hunt in Canada. Over the past four years more than one million seals have been hunted. Almost all of the seals killed were pups under three months of age. Do you support or oppose the commercial hunting of seals off Canada’s Atlantic coast? Would that be strongly or somewhat support/oppose?
and
Question: Currently, the Canadian government spends tax dollars to support the commercial seal hunt. They do this by sending delegations abroad to lobby foreign governments and promote the seal hunt, by using icebreakers to provide access to seal herds to sealers, and by developing and marketing new products made from seals. Given the current global economic crisis, do you strongly support, somewhat support, somewhat oppose or strongly oppose the federal government using taxpayer dollars to support the commercial seal hunt?
We find both polls to be biased, but the DFO poll made statements that were clearly false. Read the IFAW report here.
Seals and Cod
For many years, in the 1990's and into the 21st century, the DFO spread propaganda all over the Maritimes, blaming the harp seals for the collapse of the cod fishery. This propaganda continued despite evidence from marine scientists, including DFO scientists, that the seals' diet consists of only about 3% cod and that seals also consume squid and other predators of cod.
Why scapegoat the seals? Because admitting that the real reason for the collapse of the cod fishery, overfishing during the second half of the 20th century, would be admitting abject failure on the part of the agency tasked with the management of the fisheries: the DFO. Instead of accepting blame, the DFO decided that the seals would make a convenient scapegoat as well as a source of income to replace some of the income lost when the cod fishery closed.
As DFO scientists began to openly contradict the government propaganda, DFO officials began to change their tune. Instead of claiming that the seals caused the collapse of the cod fishery, they began to claim that the seals were preventing the cod population from rebounding after the commercial fishery was shut down. Still, this claim was refuted by the DFO's own scientists, so finally, in 2005, the DFO began asserting that the seals did not cause the collapse of the cod fishery or prevent it from rebounding (though some government officials have continued to claim that the seals are affecting the recovery of the cod).
Unfortunately, the DFO has been much less diligent in correcting prior false propaganda than it was in spreading the propaganda in the first place. Consequently, most people in the sealing provinces still believe the old lies.
Read more about the seal-cod relationship here.
Political Action To End the Seal Slaughter

Sen. Mac Harb, Canada |
One Canadian politician has stood out as a champion of the seals: Senator Mac Harb. In 2009, Sen. Harb witnessed the slaughter with IFAW observers. He said, "Continuing to defend the commercial seal hunt is not the answer.The government can’t go on burying its head in the sand and pretending everything is going to be okay. It is time to provide mechanisms to transition the few thousand individuals in sealing out of this declining industry and into jobs with more promising futures."
"I plan to go back next year and every year until this hunt ends to catalogue the wastefulness of this hunt. I have an obligation to the majority of Canadians who oppose the hunt to be a witness to this waste of tax-dollars and a vocal advocate for its swift conclusion," he added.
Sen. Harb has taken a stand by introducing a bill into Canada's Senate: S-207 Ending the Commercial Seal Hunt in Canada
"On March 9, 2010 I re-introduced legislation in the Senate which, by amending The Fisheries Act, will effectively end the commercial seal hunt in Canada while respecting treaty obligations and protecting the rights of Canada’s aboriginal people," Sen. Harb said.
Read more about the "End the Commercial Seal Hunt in Canada S-207" Senate bill here.
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