Guest guest Posted September 24, 2006 Report Share Posted September 24, 2006 [Vivisection] Petition to save Rhesus Monkeys Please take a minute to sign this petition: http://www.gopetition.com/online/3130.html Kathmandu, September 21 Around 1,200 people from 21 countries have signed a petition calling on Nepal to cancel its plans to establish laboratories using rhesus monkeys and to export monkeys. Signatures came from India, Singapore, Ireland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Australia, Canada, the United States, Hong Kong, the United Kingdom, China, New Zealand, Panama, Jordan, UAE, Israel, Colombia, Spain and Japan as well as Nepal. The Wildlife Watch Group (WWG) and Animal Nepal have joined hands with the world's leading animal welfare agencies and biologists to oppose breeding and exporting of Nepalese monkeys for biomedical research in America, according to a statement issued here today by the WWG. " The monkeys are to go to Washington and Texas where potentially dangerous and/or lethal experiments will be carried out on them. Two American agencies, the Washington National Primate Centre (WNPC) and Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research (SFBR), and their Nepalese counterparts received government permission to catch, breed and export Nepalese rhesus monkeys for this purpose " the statement said. The campaigners in their petition outline that monkeys are considered sacred and are an important part of Nepal's heritage for a number of reasons. They say Nepal will not deserve credit for providing monkeys for biomedical research by maintaining outdated, unreliable, and unethical methods for conducting studies. Most countries now maintain a complete ban on great ape experimentation. India for instance, after realising that its rhesus monkeys were used for gruesome radiation experiments in the US, banned all primate exports in 1977, it added. The statement further said: " American centres try to find loopholes in the world's legal animal rights provisions, and in Nepal (one of the few countries in the world still largely without such legislation) it has found ideal working ground. " The campaigners have strongly requested the government of Nepal to demonstrate its commitment to enlightened and ethical research practices by halting breeding facilities for biomedical research on Nepali monkeys and implement legislation to prevent such developments from occurring again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2006 Report Share Posted September 25, 2006 Thanks for posting this (again) Chien, our group here www.animalnepal.org has teamed with another protection agency in Nepal - WWG - and are in the planning stages of a conference on the topic; all local press and other sentient-beings rights groups will be invited along with the government and " offending " parties. WWG will present a whitepaper along with the petition, and AnimalNepal has commissioned a song/music video written on behalf of the Monkeys, which will début at the conference, and will be performed by a well-know celebrity. Donations to the cause are always welcome (www.animalnepal.org) as our words of encouragement and advice. Yours, Jiggy Gaton CEO, Phoenix Studio Chair, Animal Nepal 9851044033 aapn [aapn ] On Behalf Of Le Petit Chien Sunday, September 24, 2006 8:11 PM Undisclosed-Recipient:; Petition to save Rhesus Monkeys [Vivisection] Petition to save Rhesus Monkeys Please take a minute to sign this petition: http://www.gopetition.com/online/3130.html <http://www.gopetition.com/online/3130.html> Kathmandu, September 21 Around 1,200 people from 21 countries have signed a petition calling on Nepal to cancel its plans to establish laboratories using rhesus monkeys and to export monkeys. Signatures came from India, Singapore, Ireland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Australia, Canada, the United States, Hong Kong, the United Kingdom, China, New Zealand, Panama, Jordan, UAE, Israel, Colombia, Spain and Japan as well as Nepal. The Wildlife Watch Group (WWG) and Animal Nepal have joined hands with the world's leading animal welfare agencies and biologists to oppose breeding and exporting of Nepalese monkeys for biomedical research in America, according to a statement issued here today by the WWG. " The monkeys are to go to Washington and Texas where potentially dangerous and/or lethal experiments will be carried out on them. Two American agencies, the Washington National Primate Centre (WNPC) and Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research (SFBR), and their Nepalese counterparts received government permission to catch, breed and export Nepalese rhesus monkeys for this purpose " the statement said. The campaigners in their petition outline that monkeys are considered sacred and are an important part of Nepal's heritage for a number of reasons. They say Nepal will not deserve credit for providing monkeys for biomedical research by maintaining outdated, unreliable, and unethical methods for conducting studies. Most countries now maintain a complete ban on great ape experimentation. India for instance, after realising that its rhesus monkeys were used for gruesome radiation experiments in the US, banned all primate exports in 1977, it added. The statement further said: " American centres try to find loopholes in the world's legal animal rights provisions, and in Nepal (one of the few countries in the world still largely without such legislation) it has found ideal working ground. " The campaigners have strongly requested the government of Nepal to demonstrate its commitment to enlightened and ethical research practices by halting breeding facilities for biomedical research on Nepali monkeys and implement legislation to prevent such developments from occurring again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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