22 macaques rescued from cruel ‘Dancing Monkey’ trade
News
With your wonderful support, our partners at Jakarta Animal Aid Network (JAAN) have recently rescued Johnny and 21 more macaque monkeys from a cruel monkey ‘dance’ training hub in Cirebon, Indonesia. This massive victory wouldn’t be possible without your generosity.
Image: Rescued monkeys - Unyil, Cino and Subur. Courtesy of Jakarta Animal Aid Network
Last month, we contacted you with an urgent request to rescue 30 macaque monkeys trapped in the cruel 'Dancing Monkey' trade in Indonesia. We are thrilled to share that 22 of these monkeys have been successfully rescued in a major joint rescue operation with our partner JAAN.
Because of your compassionate support, these monkeys will finally have a second chance at life. A life where they can climb, play, socialise and no longer be exploited for financial gain.
These monkeys were safely relocated to JAAN’s rehabilitation centre in Cikole, West Java, where they will receive love and high-quality veterinary care and finally be able to express their natural behaviours as primates – thanks to you. Their rehabilitation program will focus on nursing them back to health and prepare them for a potential re-release into the wild.
Thanks to your ongoing support, there are more rescues being planned and our partners on the ground are working very hard to negotiate the freedom of the remaining macaques.
These monkeys have endured one of the cruellest training regimes imaginable. After being stolen from their mothers as babies and tortured for months, their living nightmare is finally over.
We helped end bear dancing in Greece, Turkey, India and Nepal, and now we are one step closer to ending these horrific dancing monkey practices in Indonesia for good. We look forward to the day when we can celebrate a nationwide ban on dancing monkeys.
Macaques are wild animals who have the right to life a wild life. We’re happy that together with our partners at Jakarta Animal Aid Network (JAAN) we can give these monkeys a second chance.
Long-tailed macaques like Johnny (now renamed Panjul), Unyil and Jono were taken from the wild as infants to be cruelly trained for months on end, with the aim to ‘dance’, walk on stilts, wear human clothing and masks made from doll heads, and beg for money from shoppers and tourists on the busy streets of Indonesia.
And after every excruciating day of ‘work’, these monkeys would often be locked inside dark boxes until the morning.
During the rescue, Unyil looked fragile and scared and wanted to be close to his friend Jono, who was chained a little bit further away. Thanks to your generosity, these previously exploited monkeys will now have lives worth living.
It is such an incredible relief to see the dark boxes, in which the monkeys were kept when they were not performing, finally get opened. It is really heartwarming, knowing that their journey to freedom has started in which they will be able to connect to each other and to other primates and live a life they truly deserve.
At JAAN’s rehabilitation centre, they will be able to develop all the necessary life skills that they weren’t able to learn from their mothers in the wild. Their rehabilitation program will also help them form strong social groups so they can hopefully be released into the wild together as a family.
To ensure this is the last generation of ‘dancing monkeys’, we are working closely with our partners at JAAN to guide the monkey handlers to explore alternate, humane livelihoods that don’t involve harming animals.
Thank you for giving macaques like Panjul, Unyil and Jono a life worth living. Together, we can make this the last generation of ‘Dancing Monkeys'.
Help Monkeys Today
Will you please help monkeys exploited in the ‘Dancing Monkey’ or ‘Topeng Monyet’ trade for human amusement in Indonesia?
Our wildlife work
Around the world, wild animals are being exploited. They’re hunted down, trapped and farmed in captivity, all to be sold and abused for entertainment, medicine, fashion, pets and products.