Sightings: A Monkey’s Last Stand

Highly recommended — famed Malaysian blogger TV Smith’s photo essay “A Monkey’s Last Stand” . Eloquent. Evocative. Powerful. A sad commentary of Malaysia celebrating 50th Merdeka anniversary.

This is TV Smith’s first of four photo-essays:

Bukit Melawati, 22nd August 2007: Despite his patriotic stand, he will soon be stripped of his citizenship and banished to another country. Perhaps, our monkeys were already doomed when people in authority likened bloggers to them.

The Cabinet has literally signed their death warrant by withdrawing protection for the so-called urban monkeys under the Wildlife Protection Act. How can we stand tall as a nation, when we so casually shrugged-off our responsibility to protect the weak and defenseless?

Visit http://www.mycen.com.my/sightings/sightings220807_monkey.html to ponder whether it is “The Alamo” for another of our great fundamental rights.

13 Replies to “Sightings: A Monkey’s Last Stand”

  1. Actually, our monkeys are not only stripped of their citizenship and banished to another country. They are to be abused and tortured in American medical/defence laboratories, suffering and dying while undergoing experiments in the name of advancement of humanity.

  2. I am little confused here , with the real monkeys and the monkeys look – alike , and wannable monkeys, and of course me- a monkey too because we blog.

    k1980- what monkey are you refering to.?

    read my lips.

  3. I have friends that work in Perhilitan (the wildlife department) who told me that the lifting of the ban on monkey export was engineered by the former Perhilitan director general and the current minister. Apparently, a deal has been struck with one of the top wildlife dealers to export monkeys – with kickbacks going to the ex-DG and the YB Minister.

    Local market price for one macaque is about RM10-20, export price is around RM250. They are targeting exporting around 80,000 macaques a year. Which would rake in a cool RM20m.

  4. “How can we stand tall as a nation, when we so casually shrugged-off our responsibility to protect the weak and defenseless?”

    This is the era of Islam Hadhari, it is a jungle out here.

  5. We must export the Kurang Jar monkey to the American lab. It is good for the scientists to study how monkeys develop greed, lie and corrupt behaviour from this Kurang Jar monkey alone!

    One will do, need not export too many.

    May be Hisap-puding monkey should be exported too for violent behaviours and kris-waving research.

  6. A degree of confirmation regarding my allegations of corruption above on the export of macaques (from The Star):

    …“The very fact that the Malaysian government has ruled out culling suggests that there may be financial motivation involved .

    It also looks like the government is attempting to create an export market,” said Eudey.
    Mohd Khan questioned the assertion by the authorities that “it is better to export than to cull”.
    “Better for whom?” he asked. “Follow the money trail and trace who the benefactors are.”

    Last week, Minister of Natural Resources and Environment Datuk Seri Azmi Khalid candidly told participants at a climate change workshop that he had been approached by “some bright people who saw that money could be made from exporting monkeys”.

    Sources said the proposal to export monkeys came up prior to the retirement of Perhilitan director-general, Datuk Musa Nordin, last October. In a telephone interview, Musa said he was “indirectly involved” in the trade but declined to comment when asked if he had teamed up with a wildlife trader.

    When pressed further, he said: “Go talk to Perhilitan. They’re the one making the policy. I’ve retired.”

    Sources reveal that at least one company has submitted a business plan to the ministry proposing an export volume of between 12,000 and 20,000 monkeys per year. Each shipment will carry between 2,000 and 2,500 specimens.

    The business plan lists the likely buyers as two laboratories and one breeding centre in China. One of the laboratories is Kunming Primate Research Centre, which is affiliated to the Chinese Academy of Sciences. The centre was set up in 2005 as a research base for experiments against infectious diseases and bio-terrorism. – By Hilary Chiew and S.S. Yoga

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