Subscribe to daily environment news





 

Click for news Click for pictures
National Tree Day

Planet Ark Home


Malaysia Scraps Plan to Export Pesky Monkeys
Mail this story to a friend | Printer friendly version

MALAYSIA: February 4, 2008


KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysia has dropped a plan to round up nuisance monkeys from its cities and sell them abroad as exotic meat or for medical research, after discovering that most of the animals are too ill to be exported.


In August, the government said it would end a ban on the export of long-tailed macaques after complaints that they were too aggressive and had attacked residents. Animal-rights groups objected, saying the monkeys would be sold to laboratories.

But the New Straits Times said on Saturday the government had now reversed its decision after discovering that the monkeys were riddled with diseases and that no one would want to buy them.

"They were supposed to fulfil the demand for exotic meat in a few countries in Asia and in the West," the daily quoted Natural Resources and Environment Minister Azmi Khalid as saying.

A recent study found 80 percent of urban macaques carried diseases such as tuberculosis, malaria, hepatitis and AIDS, he said. "Only 20 percent were healthy and, of this, only half the number were suitable for export," he added.

The report also quoted Azmi as saying the diseases could pose a threat to human health, but it gave no idea as to how the government now planned to tackle the problem.

Veterinary experts have previously called for relocation programmes, reproduction controls and public education to stop residents from feeding or teasing the animals.

(Reporting by Mark Bendeich; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

Reuters



© 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
top

 
4 FEB 2008
ENVIRONMENT
NEWS

ALGERIA:
Algeria Drops Plan to Protect Park - Report

AUSTRALIA:
Australia Police to Question Anti-Whaling Activists

AUSTRALIA:
Australia PM Calls Summit to Tackle Drought, Reforms

BANGLADESH:
Bangladesh to Develop Coal Field With Own Experts

BRAZIL:
Eight Killed in Mudslides Outside Rio De Janeiro

CANADA:
Canada Panel Suggests US$2 Bln Carbon Capture Plan

CHILE:
Chile Evacuates Residents from Volcano's Edge

CHINA:
Beijing Sees "Best Run" of Clear Skies Since 2000

CHINA:
China's Wild Winter Weather Could Last Another Week

FRANCE:
French Pesticide Ban Hits Major Listed Firms

INDONESIA:
Indonesian Floods Displace Thousands, Cause Chaos

MADAGASCAR:
Madagascar Cyclone Toll Rises to 12

MALAYSIA:
Malaysia Scraps Plan to Export Pesky Monkeys

NETHERLANDS:
Dutch Gas Guzzler Tax Hammers Exclusive Cars

NETHERLANDS:
Dutch to Explore New Ways to Defend Coastline

NORWAY:
New Shrew-Like Mammal in Tanzania, in Rare Find

RWANDA:
African Quakes Kill at Least 38, Hundreds Injured

UK:
Dirty London Launches Low Emission Zone for Lorries

UK:
A380 Makes Test Flight on Alternative Fuel

US:
Workweek Fumes May Make Some US Weekends Drier

US:
Groups Sue to Block Alaska Oil Drilling Plan

US:
World's Big Polluters Note Change in US Climate Stance

US:
US Sees Positive Mood Shift at Hawaii Climate Talks

US:
Global Warming Crop Harm Predicted in Africa, Asia

US:
World Urged to Help Poor Adapt to Climate Change

VIETNAM:
US-Vietnam Dioxin Effort Makes Progress at Airport



previous day
today's news
next day


This site developed by Frontline, and managed by Planet Ark using RPM-NT.

Site designed by Jon Dee @ Planet Ark.

Radiant