Fin Whales, Iceland Whaling, June 19, 2009
The tails of two 35-tonne fin whales are bound to a Hvalur boat June 19, 2009, after they were caught close to Hvalfjsrour on the western coast of Iceland. Halldor Kolbeins/AFP/Getty Images

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (Reuters) -- Activist hackers from the Anonymous collective have claimed responsibility for bringing down five government websites in Iceland in a protest against whale-hunting by the North Atlantic nation. The sites, which included the prime minister's official website and those of the environment and interior ministries, went offline Friday and remained down until about midday Saturday.

In an anti-whaling video posted on social media, activists called for people to hack websites linked to Iceland to protest persistent commercial hunting despite an international moratorium. On a new Twitter account devoted to the campaign, screenshots showing the sites down were published late Friday by activists who said they belonged to the loose Anonymous collective. The government made no comment about the outage.

Iceland is a member of the International Whaling Commission (IWC), an intergovernmental body that imposed a ban on all commercial whaling from 1986. The moratorium remains in place, but both Iceland and Norway continue to hunt whales.

Iceland has come under fire for whaling for decades, including in the 1970s and 1980s when activists from Greenpeace and the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society attempted to disrupt annual hunts using boats or by sabotaging hunting stations.

Isolated in the North Atlantic with only Greenland as its close neighbor, Iceland has relied on fishing and whaling as a key part of its economy. Icelanders argue whales reduce the stocks of the fish they hunt for.

Since Iceland's devastating financial meltdown in 2008 and a sharp currency devaluation, however, tourism has boomed and whale tours are increasingly popular.

(Reporting by Ragnhildur Siguroardottir in Reykjavik and Sabina Zawadzki in Copenhagen; Editing by Helen Popper)