Frustrated Makah rebels shoot, harpoon whale near Neah Bay
By KOMO Staff & News Services
NEAH BAY, Wash. -- Five members of the Makah Tribe, frustrated by the delay in their efforts to obtain a permit to hunt whales, shot and harpooned a California gray whale on Saturday, according to the Coast Guard.
The Coast Guard responded to witness reports of a whale shooting off the northwest tip of the Olympic Peninsula on Saturday morning.
The agency deployed three ships to the area and created a 1,000-yard safety zone around the injured whale, which is one mile east of Neah Bay, in the Strait of Juan de Fuca, about a half-mile off shore.
Washington State Patrol troopers also responded.
The Marine Mammal Protection Act outlaws whaling in the United States, but the Makah Tribe of Neah Bay has been fighting to resume whale hunting off the coast of Washington state. They base their request on an 1855 treaty with the federal government, which preserves the tribe's right to hunt whales based on the tribe's history and traditions.
The tribe resumed the hunts in 1999 and successfully killed a whale. Soon after, it stopped in order to go through a federal process to get a permit. But tribal members at Neah Bay on Saturday said some members of the tribe grew fed up with the delays in getting the permit and decided to go hunting.