Ref: Untuk melihat video pertunjukan monyet (Mongkey Bisness) click situs dan 
dibahagian bawah sekali ada videonya.

http://www.dailychilli.com/news/19968-chained-monkeys-forced-to-perform-on-jakartas-streets

Chained monkeys forced to perform on Jakarta's streets 
 
A macaque monkey nicknamed Rizal wears a doll's face as the animal is made to 
perform and beg in the streets by its handler in the Indonesian capital city of 
Jakarta. 


Squatting near a busy traffic junction in the Indonesian capital Jakarta, 
monkey-handler Takiadi tugs at the long-tailed macaque at the end of the leash 
he is clutching. 

The movement jolts the skinny, apparently playful, animal to stretch out its 
hands to passers-by and beg for alms.

It is a common scene in the city, but taking up such a visible spot is becoming 
increasingly risky for shabbily dressed Takiadi, 27, who was born and bred in 
Jakarta and has been working as a monkey handler for five years.

Days earlier he had narrowly escaped arrest after officers swooped as part of a 
new push to stop widespread cruelty to the animals.

"Public-order officers appeared out of the blue as I was putting a doll’s mask 
over the monkey’s face. I managed to run away, but my monkey was confiscated. I 
have to be more careful now," Takiadi told AFP, gripping tightly on his new 
monkey’s chain.

Referred to as "topeng monyet", meaning "masked monkeys" because of the masks 
their handlers often force them to wear, these captive macaques are caged in 
cramped, filthy conditions and forced to perform circus stunts for money.

Although penalties exist for the monkey-handlers, punishment for abuse that 
leads to the death or injury of the primates ranges from a paltry 50-cent fine 
to nine months in jail, with imprisonment rare.

 
A macaque monkey hangs chained around the neck in a strenous position for one 
month or even more to force the animal to stand erect as handlers train them to 
perform


But now the animals in the Indonesian capital may finally have found their 
saviours: Jakarta’s own monkey raiders.

Public-order officers, who assist the national police in maintaining peace on 
the streets, have begun to work with animal activists in small groups to rescue 
the macaques.

Dressed in plain clothes, groups of around five typically monitor the monkey- 
handlers for half an hour from a distance before pouncing.

"We coordinate via text message. When we’re ready, we pretend to be passers-by. 
We just walk past them and grab them,"Jakarta Animal Aid Network (JAAN) 
spokesman Benvika told AFP.


"Our main priority is to save the monkeys. They’re easy to catch since many are 
chained, but some of their handlers manage to escape. The desperate ones even 
dash across busy highways," said Benvika, who has carried out several raids.

After intensive lobbying since 2009, JAAN achieved a breakthrough in 2011 when 
Jakarta’s governor gave it the nod to help conduct unannounced weekly raids “to 
ensure order at traffic junctions“.

Since the collaboration between activists and the authorities began, around 24 
monkey-handlers and monkeys have been rounded up. It is a modest number but the 
fear of arrest has kept half of Jakarta’s 400 “regulars” off the streets, 
Benvika says.

Monkey-handlers are reprimanded and released with written warnings, and repeat 
offenders are taught vocational skills such as cooking, sewing and hairdressing 
to give them a way out.

Their animals are sent to JAAN’s rehabilitation centre in western Java to 
relearn their natural behaviour, although months of harsh training - including 
being forced to stand like humans, with their necks hung from wires and their 
arms bound - means recovery takes time.

Several of the rescued monkeys in Jakarta were suffering from tuberculosis, 
malnutrition and stress.

JAAN is currently pushing for a ban on street monkeys but handlers complain the 
ongoing raids are leaving them out of pocket.

Monkey-handler Ilin Satrio, 19, said he had been “wasting a lot of time”  
playing cat-and-mouse with the authorities, which had eaten into his earnings.

Satrio denied he mistreated his monkey, saying he fed it milk and bananas.

"I treat him like a friend. When he’s tired, I carry him so he doesn’t have to 
walk. I pity him, but what other job can I do?"

Handlers say they earn as much as 1.7 million rupiah ($175) a month for working 
a few days a week, $50 more than the monthly basic salary of factory workers, 
who clock long hours daily.

They rent a monkey for 15,000 to 30,000 rupiah a day but have to pay monkey 
owners one million rupiah if they lose the animal.

In an attempt to continue their business, some have now moved into the suburbs 
and others have gone as far as Indonesian Borneo, JAAN’S Benvika said.

Public-order officer Sofyan Nasrulloh, who joins the raids, said 
monkey-handlers plead with them to give back the animals when they are caught.

"They say it’s their only livelihood and promise not to do it again. While I do 
sympathise with them, I pity the monkeys more!" he said.

"The monkeys are all so skinny and look so tired. If they could talk, I’m sure 
they would protest."

Source:AFP

2013-02-18 18:54:0





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