The Uruguayan Whale and Dolphin Sanctuary, established in 2013, aims to protect dolphins and whales from hunting, pursuit, aggression or intentional dibsturbance in waters within the Uruguayan government’s jurisdiction. The sanctuary encompasses the entire UruguayanTerritorial Waters and Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), extending as far as 200 nautical miles (370km) from the coast and covering a total of 125,436km2 (48,431sqmi).[1]
The following activities are prohibited in the territorial sea and the exclusive economic zone, whether carried out by vessels flying a national or foreign flag:
The pursuit, hunting, fishing, appropriation, or processing of any species of whales and dolphins.
The transport and landing of live whales and dolphins, except in cases of scientific or sanitary interest, as declared by the competent national authorities.
The retention, aggression, or intentional disturbance that leads to the death of any species of whales and dolphins.[2]
History
In 2002, the Maldonado Bay, next to Punta del Este, was declared a “Whale Sanctuary” thanks to an initiative led by young students, the Maldonado government, the Ministry of Tourism, and OCC (Organization for Cetacean Conservation).
The Southern right whale can be seen from july to october during their annual migration through the sanctuary to the warmer brazilian waters.[3]
In 2008, OCC gathered over seven thousand signatures from Uruguayan, Latin American, and international supporters—including 20 organizations—calling for Uruguay to rejoin the International Whaling Commission (IWC) after 22 years of absence. That same year, Uruguay re-entered the IWC, giving new momentum to the sanctuary initiative.
In 2013, a group of students from School No. 27, representing the departments of Maldonado and Rocha, reignited the project. Alongside OCC, they presented a proposed law to the Environmental Commission of the House of Representatives. On September 8, 2013, the law was passed with unanimous support in Parliament—all 62 votes.[4][5]
Eduardo Galeano, an Uruguayan journalist, wrote a poem called Sanctuary of Life for the OCC and for the creation of the sanctuary:
If sharks made movies, who would be the villains?
How would the novel of Moby Dick have been, if the white whale had written it?
What do the sea and its creatures think of us?
If the sea could speak, what would it say?
Perhaps it would say: “I don’t want to be a factory”.
And it would say: “I don’t want to be a garbage dump”.
And it would say: “I don’t want to be a cemetery”.
From the sea came life, when life began to live,
and the sea wants to remain the untouchable Sanctuary of life.
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