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A picture released by Sea Shepherd UK shows people hunting dolphins in Leynar, the Faroe Islands, on Wednesday
A picture released by Sea Shepherd UK shows people hunting dolphins in Leynar, the Faroe Islands, on Wednesday. Photograph: Sea Shepherd UK/AFP/Getty Images
A picture released by Sea Shepherd UK shows people hunting dolphins in Leynar, the Faroe Islands, on Wednesday. Photograph: Sea Shepherd UK/AFP/Getty Images

Over 500 dolphins killed in Faroe Islands since hunt resumed in May

This article is more than 10 months old

Hundreds of pilot whales targeted in two most recent ‘grinds’, with animals beached and then slaughtered

The Faroe Islands has killed more than 500 dolphins since its hunt resumed in May, according to local authorities in the autonomous Danish territory in the north Atlantic.

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

Every summer, images of the bloody hunt make headlines around the world and are met with outrage among animal rights defenders who consider it barbaric.

“Yesterday there were two grinds, one with 266 catches and the other one with 180, according to the first reports,” said a Faroese government spokesperson.

The two grinds, which involved pilot whales, a species of dolphin, brings to five the number of grinds so far this season.

The environmental NGO Sea Shepherd, which managed to disrupt the 2014 hunt with its boats, criticised the fact that Danish navy vessels were authorised to intervene to block environmentalists.

The hunt still enjoys broad support in the Faroes, where supporters say the animals have fed the local population for centuries and accuse media and foreign NGOs of disrespecting local culture and traditions. They typically kill about 800 pilot whales a year.

In 2022, the government limited the number of Atlantic white-sided dolphins that could be killed a year to 500, after an unusually large slaughter of more than 1,400 caused an outcry even among local people.

More on this story

More on this story

  • Rare hybrid dolphins spotted off Cornish coast

  • No man is an island: life on the Faroes – in pictures

  • Newly discovered whale species could have been heaviest animal ever

  • Faroe Islands branded an ‘abattoir’ as quota set for slaughter of 500 dolphins

  • Dolphins, whales and seals being failed by UK government policy, MPs say

  • Faroes PM pledges dolphin hunt review amid outcry at carnage

  • Eight dolphins die in New Jersey stranding

  • Outcry over killing of almost 1,500 dolphins on Faroe Islands

  • Cod almighty: how a ‘mythical’ Faroes delicacy has vanished

  • Pink dolphins and reformed Colombian rebels turn no-go zone into ecotourism hit

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