By Matt
McGrath, Environment correspondent, BBC News, Bangkok
Pro-shark
fishing nations have narrowly failed to overturn a landmark protection deal
struck at the Cites conservation conference in Bangkok .
But delegates
refused the request by a wafer-thin majority and the shark ban was upheld.
The decision
is being seen as a landmark win for animal conservation.
Campaigners
say it is a truly historic day for the species, in which science triumphed over
politics.
On Monday, the
decision to increase protection for oceanic whitetips, porbeagle and hammerhead
sharks had only
scraped past the two-thirds majorities required by a handful of votes.
Campaigners had been extremely worried that
China and Japan , the main
opponents of the measures, would be able to muster the one-third support needed
to re-open the debate and block the ban.
In a tense
session here in the conference centre, they failed by just over 1%.
'Major step'
"I’m
absolutely delighted. I think this is a major step forward today. What we saw
was member states across the board say 'we are not going to be diverted from
our path'," he said.
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