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Move The Island Games Until The Faroe Islands Stop Killing Whales
Final signature count: 9,319
9,319 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: Free The Ocean
The 2027 Island Games risk becoming a global celebration shadowed by the killing of whales and dolphins unless leaders choose compassion over tradition and move the Games or end the hunts now.
The Faroe Islands are scheduled to host the 2027 Island Games after another host withdrew due to financial pressures.1 Thousands of athletes and visitors from island communities around the world are expected to travel to the North Atlantic archipelago to celebrate sport, cooperation, and shared identity.
But the same waters that will frame the Games remain the site of an ongoing and violent practice that many around the world cannot reconcile with those values.
The Grindadráp Continues
Each year, pilot whales and dolphins are driven into shallow bays and killed in coordinated hunts known as the grindadráp. In some years, hundreds or even more than a thousand cetaceans are slaughtered, often entire pods at once.3 Over the past two decades, more than 20,000 whales and dolphins have been killed in Faroese waters.4
What was once framed as subsistence has changed in scale and impact. Modern boats and equipment now allow hunters to pursue species that were historically untouched, intensifying both the suffering and the number of animals killed.3
Health Risks and Changing Public Opinion
Medical and environmental research has raised serious concerns about the safety of consuming whale and dolphin meat. Toxins such as mercury and PCBs accumulate in these animals, posing neurological and developmental risks to humans, particularly children and pregnant women.6
Public opinion within the Faroe Islands is not unified. Surveys show that many residents have never participated in the hunts, and a significant portion say they would not be affected if whale and dolphin hunting were banned.3 This signals that change is possible.
Why the Island Games Matter
The Island Games represent international cooperation, mutual respect, and pride among island nations. Hosting the Games confers global visibility and legitimacy. Conservation organizations argue that proceeding while the grindadráp continues sends a message that large-scale animal suffering can be overlooked for the sake of tradition or convenience.5
Charities and advocates are calling on organizers to move the 2027 Games unless the Faroe Islands commit to ending the hunts, aligning the event with widely shared values of compassion and respect for life.5
Take Action for a Better Future
Ending the grindadráp would prevent future suffering and allow the Faroe Islands to welcome the world without this stain. Until that happens, the 2027 Island Games should be held in a location that reflects the ethical standards expected by the international community.
Add your name now and call for the 2027 Island Games to be moved unless the Faroe Islands end the grindadráp.
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