Guest guest Posted December 26, 2000 Report Share Posted December 26, 2000 http://www.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/getarticle.pl5?nn20001226a2.htm Gifu animal firm may be trapping, selling primates to lab. Officials in Gifu and Kumamoto prefectures suspect that Japanese monkeys are being bred and sold to researchers by firms that lack proper authorization. Gifu prefectural officials Sunday searched a breeding facility of an animal-marketing company in the city of Gifu, suspecting monkeys were unlawfully being bred there and later sold. Before the search, the Gifu Prefectural Government's natural environment and forestry division received a report that the company, Komori Dobutsu Kikaku, had killed three monkeys and incinerated them, the officials said. The search turned up 10 monkeys, but officials could not confirm that others had been incinerated. The company's breeding facility, set up in the village of Ijira in the prefecture, was apparently holding monkeys that had been trapped in the prefecture after damaging local crops, the officials said. It would then sell them to a local university laboratory. The officials suspect the firm has violated the Law Concerning Protection of Wildlife and Game. In late November, an animal-rights group in Tokyo tipped off the prefectural government that a dealer was breeding monkeys without a license. Komori Dobutsu officials claimed Sunday that all its monkeys were obtained through zoos and that they did not violate any laws. They added that they did not sell the primates directly to research facilities. While acknowledging that three monkeys were incinerated, the firm said one had died of old age and the other two were killed due to a recent drive by locals to rid their farms of the animals. A researcher at Kanazawa University, which bought some of the monkeys, said there were no doubts as to the origin of the monkeys because they came with proper papers. The prefectural officials said they will conduct another search shortly and question the company's officials. Kumamoto prefectural authorities meanwhile said they suspect that a 52-year-old man residing in the city of Kumamoto may have been illegally breeding and selling Japanese monkeys. They said they would inspect his business, the Animal Research Center, within a few days. Officials have already confirmed that several dozen monkeys were being kept in small cages in the village of Kugino at a facility related to the business. The man running the operation does not have authorization from the Kumamoto governor to breed or keep the monkeys, sources said. The man said he has been in contact with prefectural officials about his business and that his center aims to conduct research on breeding monkeys rather than selling them. " I've been giving the monkeys away to Osaka University and institutions in Tokyo. I didn't think I needed authorization for that, " he said. The Japan Times: Dec. 26, 2000 © All rights reserved Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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