Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

Bid to stop lab chimps import

- By Gerry Warren gwarren@thekmgroup.co.uk @Gerry_warren

Animal welfare campaigner­s are urging a wildlife park to halt its efforts to bring seven laboratory chimpanzee­s from America to a new home near Canterbury.

Wingham Wildlife Park has already built a £1 million enclosure for the apes and say they are confident the chimps will be happy in their new home.

It will be a huge change for the animals, which have spent years at the Emory University’s Yerkes National Primate Research Centre in Atlanta.

The park has the backing of chimp expert Jane Goodall who has visited Wingham and approved of the new facilities.

A permit for the exportatio­n of the chimps has been granted by the US Fish and Wildlife Service but the process has been stalled after a group called Cruelty Free Internatio­nal filed legal action against the US FWS.

It wants the chimps to end their days in an American sanctuary rather than being transporte­d thousands of miles to become “exhibits” in Kent.

A judge stopped the export proceeding­s while she learned more about details of a joint Wingham Wildlife Park and the Yerkes Centre project to support chimpanzee conservati­on in the wild as part of the process.

Chief executive of Cruelty Free Internatio­nal Michelle Thew said: “If these chimpanzee­s are imported into the UK, they will become part of a commercial exhibition at a zoo for public entertainm­ent.

“This is not what they deserve after years of being trapped inside a laboratory and used in research. We call on Wingham Wildlife Park to do the right thing and act in the best interests of these chimpanzee­s.”

Wingham Wildlife Park Animal curator Marcus Wilder recently attended a court hear- ing in America and the judge is expected to make a ruling on September 1.

Mr Wilder said the park had invested heavily in time and resources to bring the chimps to the park and was “not considerin­g” the possibilit­y of the transfer being refused.

He fiercely rejected claims by Cruelty Free Internatio­nal and said the park was looking forward to being part of a new project with the Yerkes centre that will help chimpanzee­s in the wild in Africa and the residents of a poor rural community.

He said: “During the past few months, organisati­ons who oppose the chimpanzee donation have made a number of incorrect claims about this project and our park in an attempt to discredit our credential­s and practice with misinforma­tion.

“Chimp expert Jane Goodall has visited the park and experience­d for herself our enclosure which she said was ‘wonderful’.

“She also credited us with being committed to ensuring the longterm care of these chimpanzee­s and to enriching their lives.

“We’re proud the impact of this chimpanzee donation will not only provide the seven donated chimpanzee­s with a fabulous new home for life, but also lead to a unique new project to conserve chimpanzee­s in the wild.”

 ?? Picture: Chris Davey FM4324410/ FM4324388 ?? Animal welfare campaigner­s are attempting to block the transfer of seven chimpanzee­s from America to Wingham Wildlife Park; Tony Binskin and Marcus Wilder in the new chimp enclosure
Picture: Chris Davey FM4324410/ FM4324388 Animal welfare campaigner­s are attempting to block the transfer of seven chimpanzee­s from America to Wingham Wildlife Park; Tony Binskin and Marcus Wilder in the new chimp enclosure
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