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Chitchat PAP MP's interesting take on Monkey

scroobal

Alfrescian
Loyal
Both the PAP MP and AVA have stated that this is a wild monkey while the previous press reports and video shows that the monkey approaching humans unlike wild monkeys. I am sure like all monkeys the mischief is not far off but classifying this as wild is really odd. Monkeys are gregarious by nature and are always in a group. How this wild money came to be alone and remains alone in the same vicinity and its lack of fear of humans are contrary to what Louise Ng and AVA are stating. Bernard Harrison has also commented on this monkey. All what has been said and seen suggest that it was pet that was released in the park by then owner.

If they can bend the truth on a single monkey to tackle the problem of one monkey in the wrong place and to take it away from public eye I wonder how much they would bend on other more important matters. Why not state that they are taking it in in view of the nuisance factor to determine if it can be rehabilitated to be released to the wild would have been more appropriate.

http://www.tnp.sg/news/singapore-news/chippy-removed-be-rehabiliated-returned-wild'CHIPPY' REMOVED TO BE REHABILIATED, RETURNED TO WILD

MONKEY AT KENT RIDGE PARK TO BE REHABILITATED AFTER COMPLAINTS OF NUISANCE
Aug 19, 2016 6:00am
BY JUDITH TAN


Chippy the monkey, said to be bothering residents living near Kent Ridge Park, has been removed to be rehabilitated and returned to the wild.

In a joint statement to The New Paper earlier this week, the Agri-Food & Veterinary Authority (AVA) and National Parks Board (NParks) said it was done "to ensure public safety".

Mr Louis Ng, head of the Animal Concerns Research & Education Society (Acres), also said: "Chippy is a wild macaque. We are working on rehabilitating Chippy so that she can hopefully be wild and free again rather than be held captive."

The two agencies said they had received feedback about monkey nuisance and attacks in the vicinity of Kent Ridge Park and Normanton Park condominium.

Their statement said: "We have ascertained that this nuisance was caused by a lone macaque which was regularly fed by some members of the public.

"...Monkey nuisance and attacks often arise when monkeys are fed by irresponsible members of the public.

"Feeding wild monkeys alters their natural behaviour and makes them reliant on humans for food. This eventually leads the monkeys to display aggressive behaviour such as grabbing plastic bags and food containers from people."

Under the law, monkey-feeding is an offence and the penalty is a fine up to $50,000 or a jail term up to six months, or both.

But Madam Prema, a 70-year-old Normanton Park resident who befriended the long-tailed macaque, told TNP in a phone interview that Chippy "had never grabbed anyone's bag or attacked park-goers".

Chippy made his appearance in February.

Madam Prema's daughter, Ms Maria Chaya, said: "I remember my mother coming home that first day and telling us how he sat next to her and was friendly.

"We called the SPCA (Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals), who then advised us to call Acres. Its staff came down to observe him and told us he was a young transient, a lone monkey, and for us to leave him alone and we did."

Prior to Chippy, the last monkeys seen in the area were between 2009 and 2010, said Ms Chaya.

"The troop was subsequently culled because they entered Normanton Park and had bitten someone. In the preceding six years, no monkeys, troops or transient, have been seen in Lower Kent Ridge or Normanton Park," she added.

Madam Prema's friendship with the monkey came to light when a petition was posted online by British monkey sanctuary, Wales Ape and Monkey Sanctuary, not to have the primate culled but re-homed with it.

The family said they contacted the sanctuary in April, only when the abuse of Chippy had escalated. Ms Chaya said she was willing to pay to have Chippy vaccinated, quarantined and then shipped to Britain.

Madam Prema said she misses her primate friend and is feeling depressed "because I helped them entrap him".

"I called, he came and went into the cage," she said.

Should rehabilitation fail, would Chippy be sent to a sanctuary abroad?

An NParks spokesman said the objective behind NParks, AVA and Acres working together was to rehabilitate the macaque so as to wean it off human food and "reverse the monkey's dependence on humans".

"Acres had successfully rehabilitated macaques and reintroduced them back to the forest previously. The rehabilitation process usually takes a few months, though it differs from monkey to monkey," said the spokesman.

She also added that Chippy is a native wildlife.

"In general, the Government and Acres do not support the export of native wildlife overseas," she said.

- See more at: http://www.tnp.sg/news/singapore-ne...habiliated-returned-wild#sthash.kIkJCf0U.dpuf
 

Thick Face Black Heart

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Why was it a British animal sanctuary who championed not culling but re-homing the monkey, rather than our home-grown animal activist Louis Ng? Must be the stressful demands of being a PAP MP - long hours, low pay, poor food, etc.
 
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