Report raises alarm over Laos monkey farms

Thousands of monkeys are being held in overcrowded and barren farms in Laos and sold for international laboratory research, according to a report from a British animal protection group.

 

Laos has exported nearly 35,000 long-tailed macaques since 2004 as part of a fast-growing trade in the species for research, the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV) said in a statement released Monday.

The “appalling conditions and treatment of monkeys inside the breeding farms… breach internationally recognised animal welfare guidelines,” the BUAV said, following a field investigation and talks with primate company owners.

“Some monkeys were found dead in their pens, while others were severely emaciated and/or suffering from severe hair loss and injuries,” BUAV said.

The monkeys in the Laos farms were being sold to companies in China and Vietnam, which then supply primates to laboratories in the United States and Europe, the report alleges.

“The profit margins are huge (and) the money they’re raking in is going to be very significant,” added Shepherd, who has visited Chinese-run monkey farms in Laos.

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