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Bahamas Sea Turtle Group Updates Web
Site
July 22, 2008
Bahamas Government urged to pass legislation to stop the killing and
torture of sea turtles in The Bahamas.
Nassau, Bahamas - The Bahamas Sea Turtle Conservation Group’s campaign
to ban the killing of sea turtles in The Bahamas is gaining momentum,
says Jane Mather, president of Advocate for Animal Rights, one of the
group’s organizers. According to Mather, “We recently launched a
redesigned Internet site (www.saveourseaturtles.com) to support our
international advertising and turtle awareness program that is reaching
millions of Internet users around the world.”
Our site includes new information about sea turtles,
interesting articles, photos showing the inhumane treatment of these
magnificent creatures, and links to other sites. Mather says more than
5,000 people have so far signed an online petition (on
Care2petition.com) to end the sea turtle killings and nearly 230,000
people have seen our online ad campaign.
Bumper stickers are being seen ever more frequently on
cars around The Bahamas saying, "Stop the Killing" of sea turtles.
Mather also outlined that press releases are being sent out worldwide
and covered on environmental web sites to bring attention to the cruelty
that is taking place in The Bahamas. She hopes the information and
photos on the new Internet site will inform the public of the cruelty
that is taking place in tourist oriented destinations like The Bahamas,
and shock people to create a chain reaction leading to a worldwide ban
on the killing of sea turtles.
According to Kim Aranha, President of The Bahamas Humane
Society, the drive to save sea turtles is gaining momentum. Most
recently, the Bahamas National Trust added its voice to the call for a
total ban on harvesting sea turtles, and thousands of people have signed
a petition demanding swift government action to end the cruelty.
In a press release issued on Sept 18, the Bahamas
National Trust said it "joins the Bahamas Sea Turtle Conservation Group,
The Nature Conservancy, The Bahamas Humane Society, Friends of the
Environment and BREEF in the call for a total ban on the harvesting of
sea turtles in The Bahamas."
Mather says Bahamas fisheries laws still allow the
catching and slaughter of certain turtles, even though the country is a
party to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of
Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), which calls on member states to protect
all marine turtles as endangered or threatened. According to Mather,
“One of the conditions of being a signatory to CITES states that the
signing country is obliged to change their current legislation to
conform to the obligations of the convention.”
The Bahamas is also a signatory to the Convention on Biological
Diversity, which commits The Bahamas to avoid the extinction of any more
Bahamian species. Nine sea turtles have been rescued from fishermen over
the past couple of years, rehabilitated and returned to the sea. But
fishermen are still catching turtles knowing that conservationists will
buy them in order to release them.
Other organizing members of the Bahamas Sea Turtle
Conservation Group include Deborah Krukoski, vice president of Animals
Require Kindness (ARK) and Kim Aranha, president of The Bahamas Humane
Society. Several other organizations actively support the new group,
including Proud Paws, ReEarth, Earth Care, Young Bahamian Marine
Scientists, the Freeport Humane Society, Friends of the Environment in
Abaco and many more. The Bahamas Sea Turtle Conservation Group urges all
members of the public to visit their web site at
www.saveourseaturtles.com and sign the petition urging government to
stop the killing of sea turtles in The Bahamas.
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