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A company stopped importing monkeys to the U.S. for lab tests over smuggling concerns. Now they’re flooding into 91原创

The pharma company importing macaques from Cambodia says it follows strict safety protocols, and its research has led to life-changing treatments.

Updated
7 min read
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Long-tailed macaques are now聽endangered. ‘Biological resource use’ is considered a leading cause of the animal’s decline in the wild.


In early 2023, U.S. investigators subpoenaed a major pharmaceutical research firm because of exotic monkey shipments it had received from an alleged Cambodian smuggling scheme.

Charles River Laboratories said it would co-operate with the U.S. Department of Justice officials, and suspended shipments of primates to its U.S. labs from Cambodia.

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Macaques are farmed in large enclosures in Cambodia, a major global exporter of the primates.

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A 2022 indictment by the U.S. Department of Justice alleged thousands of monkeys imported into the U.S. were wild macaques that were laundered through the legal trade of the captive-bred animals.

Hidden-camera footage, filed in U.S. court proceedings against Kry Masphal, allegedly show the senior official with the聽Cambodian Department of Wildlife and Biodiversity facilitating an illicit drop-off of long-tailed macaques at a breeding facility. On March 22, 2024, Kry was found not guilty of charges of smuggling and conspiracy to smuggle.

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A worker at the gates of KF Cambodia, one of six registered monkey farms in the southeast Asian nation.

Robert Cribb

Robert Cribb is a 91原创-based investigative reporter for the Star. Reach him via email: rcribb@thestar.ca.

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