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Showing Original Post only (View all)Tribe wins major step toward resuming whaling off Washington [View all]
Source: AP
By GENE JOHNSON
SEATTLE (AP) An administrative law judge has recommended that a Native American tribe in Washington state once again be allowed to hunt gray whales a major step in its decades-long effort to resume the ancient practice.
This is a testament to what weve been saying all these years: that were doing everything we can to show were moving forward responsibly, Patrick DePoe, vice chairman of the Makah Tribe on the remote northwestern tip of the Olympic Peninsula, said Friday. Were not doing this for commercial reasons. Were doing it for spiritual and cultural reasons.
DePoe was in high school in the late 1990s when the Makah were last allowed to hunt whales occasions that drew angry protests from animal rights activists, who sometimes threw smoke bombs at the whalers and sprayed fire extinguishers into their faces.
Since then, the tribes attempts have been tied up in legal challenges and scientific review. A federal appeals court ruled in 2002 that the Makah needed a waiver under the Marine Mammal Protection Act; the tribe applied for one in 2005 but still hasnt received one.

CORRECTS DATE OF RULING - FILE - In this May 17, 1999, file photo, two Makah Indian whalers stand atop the carcass of a dead gray whale moments after helping tow it close to shore in the harbor at Neah Bay, Wash. An administrative law judge on Thursday, Sept. 23, 2021, recommended that the Makah be allowed to resume whaling along the coast of Washington state, as their ancestors did. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson, File)
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/business-environment-and-nature-native-americans-animals-washington-1e59d580efb106daa6cb10e3d83251a6