EFTA00459170.pdf
PDF Source (No Download)
Extracted Text (OCR)
These chimps helped save human lives. Then they were abandoned. - The Washington Post
10/17/16, 2:31 PM
go Washington post
Animalla
These chimps helped
save human lives. Then
they were abandoned.
1%1.00% APY
sic copmeale 1360 Money Market'
By Karin Brulliard September 29
Some of the chimpanzees were rejected pets. Others were captured in the
wild. All of them were taken in the mid-197os to a research laboratory in
Liberia, where for decades they were infected with diseases, and their blood
was drawn and tested for research that helped lead to a hepatitis B vaccine
and safer blood transfusions for humans.
The New York Blood Center, a nonprofit that ran the lab, ended its research
in Liberia in 2005 and retired the chimps to a collection of uninhabited
mangrove islands in a river. For nearly a decade, the center supplied the
animals with food and clean water, which aren't available on the islands.
Then, in 2015, as the impoverished nation staggered through an Ebola
epidemic, the charity withdrew funding, saying the chimps were now the
government's responsibility.
Today, 63 chimpanzees remain on the islands, and they're being cared for by
a coalition headed by the Humane Society of the United States, which says it
spends $30,000 a month paying a staff of 30, buying 500 pounds of chimp-
friendly food a day, and supplying birth control to female chimps so their
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/animalia/wp/2016/09/20/these-chimps-helped-save-human-lives-then-they-were-abandoned-on-islands/
Page 1 of 4
EFTA00459170
These chimps helped save human lives. Then they were abandoned. - The Washington Post
10/17/16, 2:31 PM
population does not grow. Blood center officials, meanwhile, have become
the target of protesters outside their offices and homes, and of criticism from
celebrities who accuse them of leaving the chimps to starve.
But the center hasn't backed down: It says it cannot divert "millions of
dollars away from our lifesaving mission" to care for chimpanzees.
This week, the Humane Society announced that it was partnering with
former New Mexico governor and veteran diplomat Bill Richardson to step
up what is essentially a shaming campaign to force the blood center to
reconsider. Richardson, a longtime animal advocate, said his foundation was
giving $35,000 to help build a chimp sanctuary on the islands — and that he
would join the effort to "hold the New York Blood Center accountable for
abandoning these chimps."
The controversy over the chimpanzees has been simmering at a time when
biomedical research on great apes is increasingly being abandoned. Some
European countries now prohibit it. Last year, the U.S. government ended its
use of chimpanzees in experiments and said it would retire them to
sanctuaries, and several pharmaceutical and biotech companies
have pledged to do the same. Wayne Pacelle, the Humane Society's CEO and
president, said that it is a "basic value for the research community to provide
lifetime care" for the animals.
"I cannot underscore enough: They are dodging their responsibility," Pacelle
said of the New York Blood Center.
To back up that idea, activists point to the words of Alfred M. Prince, the
center's Liberia research project director, who wrote in 2005 that the blood
center "recognizes its responsibility to provide an endowment to fund the
Sanctuary for the lifetime care of the chimpanzees." The blood center says on
its website that that was Prince's unauthorized opinion, and that its
contracts with the Liberian Institute for Biomedical Research all made clear
that the animals "were and would remain the property of the government of
https://www.washingtonpost.cominewsianimaliaiwp/2016/09/29/these-chimps-helped-save-human-lives-then-they-were-abandoned-on-islands/
Page 2 of d
EFTA00459171
These chimps helped save human lives. Then they were abandoned. - The Washington Post
10/17/16, 2:31 PM
Liberia."
Betsy Brotman, an American who for 35 years ran the lab, known as Vilab II,
told Motherboard last year that she was shocked by this attitude. "You have
to know: Vilab brought those chimps to the institute and we permitted or
encouraged them to breed," Brotman said. "This had nothing to do with the
Liberian government. There were no chimps there until we put our feet
there."
Kathleen Conlee, vice president for animal research at the Humane
Society, said boatloads of fruits and vegetables are tossed to the chimps
once daily, but they should be fed twice a day. The organization also wants to
build a sanctuary with facilities that would allow it to provide the apes with
veterinary care; she said it would cost about $3 million. Twelve of the
chimps are under age io, and they can live as long as 6o years, she said.
Motherboard reported that the blood center claimed $459 million in assets
in 2013, which the Humane Society contends is evidence that it can support
the chimps. Pacelle said the blood center recently offered to pay 5 percent of
the animals' lifetime care costs, and amount he called "absurd." The blood
center did not respond Wednesday to a Washington Post request for
information about that offer.
"If this were a struggling charity that had no resources and they were making
a triage decision, at least we could understand it a little better," Pacelle said.
"Why is it okay to dump this responsibility on someone else because we care
more?"
Pacelle and Richardson said they recently asked 90 of the blood center's
corporate donors in a letter to withdraw funding and condemn the center's
position on the chimps. Some donors have already done that. In March,
Citibank issued a statement saying it was no longer a significant donor but
believed that "the current situation is not tolerable." MetLife, which
Motherboard reported gave the blood center $250,000 in 2015, said this
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/animalia/wp/2016/09/20/these-chimps-helped-save-human-lives-then-they-were-abandoned-on-islands/
Page 3 of d
EFTA00459172
These chimps helped save human lives. Then they were abandoned. - The Washington Post
10/17/16, 2:31 PM
month that the nonprofit "should provide financial support for the care of
these animals" and that it would withhold donations until "a solution is
found."
Read more:
These men stole an endangered penguin and released him. Officials say he
may not survive.
This town is considering a leash law — for cats
Elephant poachers are even deadlier than we knew
Horses can learn to tell us how they feel
Karin Brulliard is a national reporter who runs the Animalia blog.
Previously, she was a foreign correspondent and a local reporter.
NI Follow @karinbrulliard
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/animalia/wp/2016/09/29/these-chimps-helped-save-human-lives-then-they-were-abandoned-on-islands/
Page 4 of
EFTA00459173
Document Preview
PDF source document
This document was extracted from a PDF. No image preview is available. The OCR text is shown on the left.
This document was extracted from a PDF. No image preview is available. The OCR text is shown on the left.
Document Details
| Filename | EFTA00459170.pdf |
| File Size | 239.7 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 6,884 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T22:04:15.760062 |