*** Cash-strapped Sri Lanka scraps monkey business plan | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Cash-strapped Sri Lanka scraps monkey business plan

AFP | Colombo

The Daily Tribune – www.newsofbahrain.com    

Bankrupt Sri Lanka’s government yesterday said it was scrapping plans to export around 100,000 endangered monkeys to China following an outcry and a court case by animal lovers.

The toque macaque is endemic to Sri Lanka and common on the island of 22 million people but is classed as endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) red list.

Agriculture minister Mahinda Amaraweera said in June that China wanted the monkeys for 1,000 zoos across the country, describing the move as a solution to the animals destroying crops.

But yesterday, Sri Lanka’s Department of Wildlife Conservation (DWC) told the Court of Appeal that it had decided not to go ahead with the export and that the action filed by 30 wildlife and environmental activists could be terminated.

“A state attorney informed court on behalf of the DWC that no monkeys will be exported to China or elsewhere,” a court official told AFP. Wildlife enthusiasts welcomed the government’s decision not to go ahead with the exports. “This is an excellent outcome for wildlife conservation in Sri Lanka,” they said in a brief statement.

The proposed sale to China came as it faced its worst-ever economic crisis. No financial details were made available.