Sir David Attenborough calls for end to brain experiments on monkeys
Experts concerned about controversial neuroscience research
Scientists, primatologists and animal welfare experts have today joined us to raise concerns about the controversial use of monkeys in brain experiments.
The group of 21 experts has signed an open letter of concern to bodies in the UK and EU responsible for funding and licensing this type of research.
Sir David Attenborough, broadcaster and naturalist, said: “The recognition that apes, certainly, and to an extent other primates, are so akin to ourselves, and can suffer so much, as we can, has transformed our attitude, or should have transformed our attitude, to using them for our own benefit. They are sentient beings that have mental lives comparable to ours, and sensitivities, and pain and deprivation mean things to them, just as they mean things to us.”
Jane Goodall, PHD, DBE Founder - the Jane Goodall Institute & UN Messenger of Peace, said: “I and my team have studied chimpanzees, our closest living relatives, for over 50 years. I can state categorically that they have a similar capacity for suffering, both mental and physical, and show similar emotions to many of ours. We also study baboons and other monkeys and there is no doubt they too can suffer and experience fear, depression, anxiety, frustration and so on. To confine these primate relatives of ours to laboratory cages and subject them to experiments that are often distressing and painful is, in my opinion, morally wrong. To restrain their movement and deprive them of water is inhumane and extremely cruel and we have no right to exploit them in this way for any reason.”
Please add your voice to end these brutal, unnecessary experiments on monkeys in the UK.