Guest guest Posted September 2, 2004 Report Share Posted September 2, 2004 http://www.japantoday.com/e/?content=news & cat=1 & id=310871 Wakayama officials drown 20 wild monkeys Thursday, September 2, 2004 at 14:34 JST WAKAYAMA — About 20 wild monkeys living in and around a defunct monkey park in Shirahama, Wakayama Prefecture, have been drowned by local town officials in a possible violation of the Wildlife Protection and Hunting Law, prefectural officials said Thursday. A local official said the town sought help from a licensed local hunters association to control the monkeys but three of its employees went on to capture and have killed the monkeys without licensed hunters since last July following a surge in complaints by local residents that the animals were frightening children at nurseries and eating produce. Wakayama Prefecture has questioned the three officials of Shirahama town and a member of Tsubaki hot spring tourism association and is considering pursuing criminal charges against them, the prefectural officials said. Unlicensed hunting carries a fine of up to 1 million yen or one year imprisonment under the wildlife protection law. The four have admitted to killing the monkeys without obtaining permission from the prefecture, as required by law, the officials said. Tourism association members killed about 10 monkeys inside the park over the past several years, while the town officials have killed nine monkeys outside the park since July 2003. In all of the cases, monkeys were first trapped in cages and then drowned, the prefectural officials said. " We decided to kill the monkeys on our own because feral monkeys could harm humans, " a tourism association member was quoted as saying. The park, opened in 1954, succeeded in artificially breeding wild monkeys in 1964. The park once boasted about 330 monkeys in its premises, but was shut down in November 2001 after monkeys began attacking humans and the number of visitors declined. Currently, about 80 monkeys are believed to live in the park's vicinity. ---------- http://www.japantoday.com/e/?content=news & cat=1 & id=310871 Wakayama officials drown 20 wild monkeys Thursday, September 2, 2004 at 14:34 JST WAKAYAMA — About 20 wild monkeys living in and around a defunct monkey park in Shirahama, Wakayama Prefecture, have been drowned by local town officials in a possible violation of the Wildlife Protection and Hunting Law, prefectural officials said Thursday. A local official said the town sought help from a licensed local hunters association to control the monkeys but three of its employees went on to capture and have killed the monkeys without licensed hunters since last July following a surge in complaints by local residents that the animals were frightening children at nurseries and eating produce. Wakayama Prefecture has questioned the three officials of Shirahama town and a member of Tsubaki hot spring tourism association and is considering pursuing criminal charges against them, the prefectural officials said. Unlicensed hunting carries a fine of up to 1 million yen or one year imprisonment under the wildlife protection law. The four have admitted to killing the monkeys without obtaining permission from the prefecture, as required by law, the officials said. Tourism association members killed about 10 monkeys inside the park over the past several years, while the town officials have killed nine monkeys outside the park since July 2003. In all of the cases, monkeys were first trapped in cages and then drowned, the prefectural officials said. " We decided to kill the monkeys on our own because feral monkeys could harm humans, " a tourism association member was quoted as saying. The park, opened in 1954, succeeded in artificially breeding wild monkeys in 1964. The park once boasted about 330 monkeys in its premises, but was shut down in November 2001 after monkeys began attacking humans and the number of visitors declined. Currently, about 80 monkeys are believed to live in the park's vicinity. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.