PETA urges boycott of coconut milk from Thailand over use of monkey labour

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NOTE: This article contains disturbing imagery of animals. Please read at your own discretion.

A recent investigation by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) is alleging that Thai producers of coconut milk are engaging in “rampant abuse” of monkey labour, in which the chained primates are forced to spend long hours picking heavy coconuts.

In a press release, the organization names delivery giant HelloFresh in particular for allegedly using suppliers that engaged in the abusive practice.

Photos and videos collected by PETA Asia investigators show monkeys being chained, whipped, beaten, and dangled from their necks at coconut farms and monkey-training schools. PETA says it visited 57 operations in nine provinces across Thailand between December 2021 and July 2022, and found animals being abused at each one, according to the investigation’s webpage.

PETA is calling on consumers to stop buying coconut milk that was produced in Thailand and is urging subscribers of HelloFresh, and its subsidiaries like Green Chef, to boycott the meal delivery service until it moves its coconut milk supply chain out of Thailand.

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In a statement, HelloFresh defended itself against PETA’s claims, saying it received assurances from suppliers that they were not engaged in monkey labour.

“HelloFresh strictly condemns any use of monkey labour in its supply chain, and we take a hard position of not procuring from suppliers or selling coconut products which have been found to use monkey labour. We have written confirmation from all of our suppliers — in the U.S. and globally — that they do not engage in these practices,” the statement reads.

But PETA says that brokers from two of HelloFresh’s coconut milk suppliers, Aroy-D and Suree, admitted to using monkey labour to investigators. Aroy-D can also be commonly found on Canadian grocery store shelves, including in Walmart and T&T.

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PETA says that monkeys who become exploited in the coconut milk trade are typically kidnapped from their families as infants and sold to “monkey schools” that use violent methods to train monkeys to pick coconuts. The animal welfare group said that one owner of a monkey school told investigators that he buys baby monkeys from farmers who use nets to catch them, even though he knows it is illegal.

Footage and photos from within a monkey school taken by PETA showed a trainer whipping an infant monkey with a tether and jerking him around.

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Photo taken by PETA investigators showing a monkey being abused by a trainer.

PETA Asia

Other footage shows a boy trying to train another monkey by dangling him from the chain around his neck, likely cutting off the monkey’s oxygen supply, PETA said.

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