Humans kill 100 million sharks a year | Photo 03

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Humans kill 100 million sharks a year | Photo 03 by Simples

LUSH and Sea Shepherd

Learn more about Sea Shepherd's partnership with LUSH through these news postings:

* 03 Sep 2008 - LUSH and Sea Shepherd Launch Global Anti-Shark-Finning Campaign: Alice Newstead Hung by Actual Shark Hooks in Protest of the Slaughter
* 21 Aug 2008 - LUSH and Sea Shepherd Launch Partnership Campaign to Protect Sharks
* 12 Aug 2008 - Lush and Sea Shepherd team-up for global campaign against shark fishing industry

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Wednesday, September 03, 2008
LUSH and Sea Shepherd Launch Global Anti-Shark-Finning Campaign: Alice Newstead Hung by Actual Shark Hooks in Protest of the Slaughter

Shoppers on Regents Street in central London likely got more than they bargained for this afternoon. In a dramatic illustration of how sharks are caught and killed for their fins, Alice Newstead, performance artist and former employee of LUSH Fresh Handmade Cosmetics, voluntarily had her skin pierced with actual de-barbed shark hooks and hung suspended from the ceiling in the window of one of LUSH's busiest shops for all to see.

As a crowd gathered to watch in horror, Newstead said, "I am doing this because the demand for shark fin soup and other shark products is wiping out the shark population." Unlike the 100 million sharks who are brutally slaughtered each year for their fins, Newstead commented, "I will be left with scars, but the wounds will heal."

"Sea Shepherd is deeply impressed by LUSH's commitment to shark conservation and its willingness to use its 500+ storefronts as a global platform for educating the public on such a critically important issue," said Kim McCoy, International Executive Director of Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. "We applaud Alice for her courageousness in using her body as a tool to help educate consumers about the urgent need to protect sharks. She is an inspiration to us all."

"Sea Shepherd will be presenting Alice Newstead with an award for courage for her incredible achievement in focusing public attention on the worldwide slaughter of sharks," said Captain Paul Watson, Founder and President of Sea Shepherd. "What she and LUSH have contributed to this conservation effort is enormous. The cruelty of the shark finning industry was brought intimately into focus with the piercing of Alice's flesh and the dripping of her blood down her back. LUSH, Sea Shepherd, and Alice are very much aware that if we drive sharks to extinction, we will destroy our oceans, and if we do that, civilization will collapse and humanity will disappear. What Alice did was not just for the saving of sharks, but for the salvation of humankind. Our admiration for her sacrifice is profound, and the scars that she will bear represent a rare courage demonstrating that we all must do what we can with the talents we possess to save our oceans."

Today's dramatic enactment of the gruesome manner in which sharks are caught kicks off the beginning of a global campaign between LUSH and Sea Shepherd. Each of LUSH's storefronts across the UK now hosts window displays featuring Sea Shepherd's jolly roger flag, LCD screens playing a continuous loop of Shark Angels footage, and other educational materials.

LUSH's staff are dressing as pirates and handing out Sea Shepherd shark brochures (PDF) in an attempt to educate consumers about the desperate plight of sharks. Among other things, LUSH is urging consumers to boycott restaurants that serve shark fin soup and health food stores that sell shark cartilage supplements. LUSH has also delivered letters to local restaurants and health food stores asking them to "wash their hands" of this barbaric industry and stop selling shark products.

To assist these businesses in "cleaning up their act," LUSH has created a new and cruelty-free product especially for this campaign, called Shark Fin Soap. The UK stores plan to sell a limited batch of 11,416 bars, with 100% of the proceeds going to Sea Shepherd. Why 11,416 bars? In recognition of the fact that a staggering 11,416 sharks are killed every hour, and that populations are being wiped out faster than they can reproduce.

To learn more, watch the video, or purchase Shark Fin Soap, visit: www.lush.co.uk.

To read LUSH's press release, click here (PDF).

Source:
http://www.seashepherd.org/sharks/lush.html

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Title: Humans kill 100 million sharks a year | Photo 03
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Created: Mon, 11/02/2009 - 3:52pm
Modified: Mon, 11/02/2009 - 5:08pm

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shark_angels_logo_borderlessShark Angels
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Shark Angels Video


Alison Kock, Julie Andersen, Kim McCoy

Sea Shepherd has long been committed to shark conservation, and in 2007 it took this commitment to an even higher level by co-founding the Shark Angels alliance. The Shark Angels' first project is a short film with the goal of personalizing sharks in a way that will help to bridge the gap in human understanding, resulting in a call to action to save sharks.

The Shark Angels alliance-consisting of Kim McCoy, Sea Shepherd Conservation Society Director; Julie Andersen, Shark Savers Director; and Alison Kock, Save Our Seas Foundation Head Field Biologist-hopes that this short film will help to open the hearts and minds of the public and increase awareness of the plight of sharks and their struggle for survival as a species.


Shark Angels underwater filming session

Alison Kock, Julie Andersen, Kim McCoy

An underlying goal of this project is to capture the Shark Angels interacting with sharks in a way that will show a softer side and build on the work that Rob Stewart has already begun with his award-winning film, Sharkwater. In doing so, McCoy, Andersen, and Kock hope to bridge the gap in human understanding and alter the public perception of a horribly misunderstood species, resulting in a call to action.

"Sharks are being killed for the vanity of humanity," said Sea Shepherd Director Kurt Lieber who joined the Shark Angels team on this expedition. "The Asian market demand for shark fin soup is driving many populations of sharks to the brink of extinction. The Shark Angels project is one way to raise the awareness of the plight of the sharks, and anyone who sees it will come away feeling as I do, understanding that the hype that Hollywood and pop-culture has bestowed on sharks is not based in reality. Sharks are top predators in the ocean, and just like wolves, they have a place in the wild that no other animal fills. They are gorgeous, graceful, curious animals that need our help to assure that they survive this shortsighted assault on their ability to exist. The Shark Angels project has great potential to have people see for themselves how misunderstood these animals are."

With 100 million sharks being ruthlessly killed each year, there are not enough Sea Shepherds in the world to defend them against human greed and exploitation. By working together rather than duplicating one another's efforts, the Shark Angels alliance maximizes the use of limited resources and enables each arm-scientific research, education, and enforcement-to focus exclusively on its respective area of expertise. Recognizing the value inherent in a diversity of shark conservation approaches, the Shark Angels aim to make this issue accessible to the public and inspire people to demand the protection of sharks on a governmental level.

"Sharks have inhabited our planet for 450 million years, since before the time of dinosaurs. If we are able to not only help people understand the vital role sharks play in ecosystems and the impact this has on all species, including humans, but also to dispel the myth that sharks are ruthless man-eaters, I will consider this project a success," said McCoy.

shark_angels_071127_9bPutting aside years of misguided programming by the media and pop-culture that sharks are mindless killing machines, McCoy, Andersen, and Kock took a leap of faith and plunged from the M/V Shear Water into seas swirling with dozens of large predatory sharks. In doing so, they discovered a world of unexpected beauty and fragility, and have emerged more resolved than ever to defend these magnificent creatures.

Sea Shepherd, celebrating over 30 years of marine wildlife conservation, is proud to be a member of the Shark Angels alliance and remains strongly committed to increasing the protection of sharks and their habitats worldwide.

Below are some preliminary images from the expedition.

 


Jim Abernethy, Kim McCoy,
Rob Stewart, Kurt Lieber

back: Jim Abernethy, Rob Stewart;
front: Alison Kock, Julie Andersen, Kim McCoy

 


back: Kurt Lieber, Eric Cheng, Shawn Heinrichs,
Jim Abernethy, Rob Stewart, Rob,
Christopher Chin, Wade, Don;
front: Julie Andersen, Kim McCoy, Alison Kock

 


 

© All photos Copyright Eric Cheng

 


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(USA) Tel: 360-370-5650   Fax: 360-370-5651
All contents copyright ©2009 Sea Shepherd Conservation Society
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