Primates

 

Aping Ethical Behavior
Desmond Morris, Guardian, feature — December 2006
The Weatherall committee reports today that monkeys, but not great apes, should continue to be used for experimentation in medical research. Anyone who has worked with apes will know just how close to us they are and will be pleased by the decision to spare them the pain of experimental procedures. But what about the monkeys?...

Crimes against Apes
Vinita Bharadwaj, Gulf News, feature — November 2006
With demand for bush meat increasing, chimpanzee and gorilla meat, he says, is highly sought after and many primates are killed mercilessly in Cameroon. "It is the surviving orphaned babies of these animals that find their way into countries in the Middle East...

Primate Passion
Laura Provolt, The Eureka Reporter, feature — August 2006
Phil Monroe was inspired to become an organ grinder by Donovan's song Hurdy Gurdy Man... At that time, it was much easier to enter a business like organ grinding than today. "Back then, you could walk into a pet store and plunk down $50 and buy a monkey," Monroe said...

Baby Monkey in Pain
Ashima Sharma, Ghaziabad Animal Shelter, essay — June 2006
With the use of a plass, her teeth are terribly uprooted without any anesthesia. Her mouth starts bleeding but who cares? Then the wound is pressed with a burning iron rod to stop the bleeding by cruel monkey performer...

Monkey Business
Tali Woodward, San Francisco Bay Guardian, feature — September 2005
Lisberger's work involves fairly invasive experiments on live subjects, and since you can't exactly stick electronic probes into the brains of human beings, Lisberger uses rhesus monkeys, those red-faced staples of biomedical research...

Animal Instincts
Tali Woodward and Brigid Gaffikin, San Francisco Bay Guardian, feature — September 2005
University officials won't let outsiders tour the labs, won't acknowledge where all the animal research facilities are, and has administrators speak on behalf of individual researchers...

A Better Place — Primarily Primates
Cindy Widner, Austin Chronicle, feature — August 2005
"Every single one is in a better place than it was before. It may not be perfect, but it's in a better place than they were before"...

Monkey Law
Cheryl Smith, Austin Chronicle, feature — August 2005
No matter how docile a dependent infant ape or monkey might act toward their caretaker, when they reach sexual maturity they start battling the humans around them for dominance, just as primates do amongst themselves in the wild...

Reachable Star
Salom Shriver, poem — August 2005
Henry went to hospital... / twas Bethesda Naval / and took a picture of an ape / in a restraining chair...

Animal Rights Activist and "Recovering Objectivist" Cries Foul!
Gayle Dean, Men's News Daily, commentary — August 2005
When animal-abusers are caught red-handed, there's not much their apologists can do, except pretend that the abuses are rare and abnormal...

UW Bids on Site Sought by Animal-rights Group
Karen Rivedal, Wisconsin State Journal, feature — August 2005
"There's an awful lot of suffering going on inside," said effort leader Rick Bogle, arguing that university officials just want to shut down public debate about animal research...

Lost Apes of the Congo
Stephan Fairs, Time Magazine, feature — January 2005
If there's one thing all the scientists can agree on, it's that if this part of Congo goes the way of other African wild lands, the great apes could soon disappear...

Chimps Deserve Better Than They Get
Roger and Deborah Fouts, Daily News, feature — March 2005
The tragic chimpanzee attack in Caliente earlier this month proves unequivocally that chimpanzees have no place on TV shows or in back yards. Buddy and Ollie, the two chimpanzees killed during the attack, got their start in the world from the same chimpanzee trainer who did the Careerbuilder.com ads seen during this year's Super Bowl...

The Betrayal of Animal Protection — The Corruption of the USDA
Michael Budkie, Stop Animal Exploitation Now! (SAEN), investigation — 2005
The thought which underlies this line of reasoning assumes that the agency charged with enforcing these new regulations actually has some interest in living up to its mandate.  However, it has become quite clear that the USDA/APHIS is more interested in serving its customers (labs, dealers, exhibitors, etc.), than law enforcement...

Lab Monkeys 'Scream With Fear' in Tests
Sandra Lavile, The Guardian, investigation — February 2005
Secret documents describing how some monkeys can scream in misery, fear and anger during experiments were produced in the high court yesterday as evidence that the laws intended to protect laboratory animals are being flouted...

Low Blows: A Report on the Sorry Plight of Boxing Orangutans in a Thai Zoo
John Aglionby, The Guardian, investigation — October 2004
The 111 of the 115 Thai kick boxers still alive after several years of a gruelling regime at the Safari World centre just south of Bangkok are reportedly suffering from herpes, skin diseases, hepatitis and mental depression. Many are children. Their accommodation is dirty, dark and cramped...

Remember Jerom
Rachel Weiss, Laboatory Primate Advocacy Group, essay — 2004
Jerom was a teenager when he died eight years ago today. He was alone and scared for many months. He was afraid of humans and he wasn’t allowed contact with other chimpanzees. When he died, he hadn’t seen the sun in at least six years...

Monkey Testes Grafted on Mice Produce Fertile Sperm
Science Blog, report — February 2004
The research team believes that this method could be used to preserve genetic material from endangered nonhuman primates that might die before reproducing. They warn, however, that ethical and safety issues will need to be resolved before work on this method proceeds to the production of human sperm for assisted fertilization
...

Poisoning for Profit
British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection, investigation — 2003
This shocking investigation reveals the full in-depth horror of life in the monkey labs at contract testers Covance in Germany...

Animal Trafficking: A Cruel Billion Dollar Business
Francesca Colombo, Common Dreams, investigation — November 2003
Although legal trade in wildlife is regulated by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), an estimated one-third of the global ales of 25 billion dollars a year is illegal — an illicit business surpassed only by arms and drugs trafficking...

Amazing (?) Animal Actors
Sarah Baeckler, Chimpanzee Collaboratory, investigation — October 2003
...for a little more than a year...I worked as a volunteer at Amazing Animal Actors, a chimpanzee training compound that supplies performers for film and television productions... And I heard the director of the compound say, “Kick her in the face as hard as you can. You can’t hurt her”...

Chickens and Chimpanzees: The Odd Couple of the Animal Rights Movement
Karen Davis, Satya Magazine, essay — 2002
Just as human verbal language is one of the many languages of life, so our particular type of intelligence is one among many. If people feel threatened by the idea of equality beyond human primatology, that is our problem to solve...

Of Monkeys and Men: Focus on Primate Research and Vivisection
Animals Voice, feature — 2001
Though the incompleteness of USDA reporting leaves us without truly exact numbers, a safe estimate would put the annual experimental toll for primates at 60,000 a year in the United States alone, with potentially another 10,000 primates kept in laboratories for breeding and conditioning...

 

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