After conducting invasive experiments on almost 500 chimpanzees for 30 years and promising to provide them with lifelong care, the New York Blood Center (NYBC) recently abandoned the 66 chimps who are still alive, leaving them to die of starvation and thirst on islands in Liberia with no natural food or water. If NYBC doesn’t resume funding when the emergency contributions made by private donors run dry, the chimps could starve to death.
In 2005, Dr. Alfred M. Prince, an NYBC executive, stated that his organization “recognized its responsibility to provide an endowment to fund the sanctuary for the lifetime care of the chimpanzees." Betsy Brotman, the director of NYBC’s chimp research program, also acknowledged her organization’s obligation: ”It’s our responsibility to try to pay them back by letting them live out their lives in their natural environment. If you’re going to do work in chimpanzees, you should set up a system so that at the end of the research they have a place where they can live.”
When the chimps were no longer needed for experiments, NYBC released them onto six islands in Liberia where the caretakers from NYBC’s former research facility could provide them with food and water. “That’s what we agreed to do,” said Brotman.
NYBC also abandoned 20 chimpanzees on an island in the neighboring Ivory Coast. Nineteen of these chimps and their offspring have died. The sole survivor, Ponso, is all alone and being fed sporadically by locals and a group formed to provide emergency relief. He is in grave danger and must be relocated to a sanctuary.
NYBC, which has $450 million in assets and has reportedly earned approximately $500 million in royalties off of the research conducted on these chimps, should not shift responsibility for the chimps to advocacy groups or the government of Liberia. As Jane Goodall noted in an open letter to NYBC, the organization has a “moral obligation” to pay for the care of these chimps.
The nation’s leading animal advocacy groups have made multiple efforts to meet with NYBC, but the organization will not even return phone calls. Perhaps they will pay more attention to their major donors. Please sign this petition to urge Citigroup, one of NYBC's top donors that also prides itself on corporate social responsibility, to make their donations contingent on NYBC reinstating funding for the chimpanzees.
If you are a Citibank or Citicard customer, please mention that in the space for comments when you sign the petition.
After conducting invasive experiments on almost 500 chimpanzees for 30 years and promising to provide them with lifelong care, the New York Blood Center (NYBC) recently abandoned the 66 chimps who are still alive, leaving them to die of starvation and thirst on islands in Liberia with no natural food or water. If NYBC doesn’t resume funding when the emergency contributions made by private donors run dry, the chimps could starve to death.
In 2005, Dr. Alfred M. Prince, an NYBC executive, stated that his organization “recognized its responsibility to provide an endowment to fund the sanctuary for the lifetime care of the chimpanzees." Betsy Brotman, the director of NYBC’s chimp research program, also acknowledged her organization’s obligation: ”It’s our responsibility to try to pay them back by letting them live out their lives in their natural environment. If you’re going to do work in chimpanzees, you should set up a system so that at the end of the research they have a place where they can live.”
When the chimps were no longer needed for experiments, NYBC released them onto six islands in Liberia where the caretakers from NYBC’s former research facility could provide them with food and water. “That’s what we agreed to do,” said Brotman.
NYBC also abandoned 20 chimpanzees on an island in the neighboring Ivory Coast. Nineteen of these chimps and their offspring have died. The sole survivor, Ponso, is all alone and being fed sporadically by locals and a group formed to provide emergency relief. He is in grave danger and must be relocated to a sanctuary.
NYBC, which has $450 million in assets and has reportedly earned approximately $500 million in royalties off of the research conducted on these chimps, should not shift responsibility for the chimps to advocacy groups or the government of Liberia. As Jane Goodall noted in an open letter to NYBC, the organization has a “moral obligation” to pay for the care of these chimps.
The nation’s leading animal advocacy groups have made multiple efforts to meet with NYBC, but the organization will not even return phone calls. Perhaps they will pay more attention to their major donors. Citigroup, as one of NYBC's top donors and a company that prides itself on corporate social responsibility, please make your donations to NYBC contingent on the organization reinstating funding for the chimpanzees.
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