WATCH | Live monkeys found stashed in bags in Thailand

18 February 2022 - 11:38
By Jiraporn Kuhahan
Monkeys found in bags hanging on a rope are pictured in an abandoned house in Saraburi Province, Thailand February 17, 2022.
Image: Thai Department of Natural Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation (DNP)/Handout via REUTERS Monkeys found in bags hanging on a rope are pictured in an abandoned house in Saraburi Province, Thailand February 17, 2022.

Dozens of live monkeys tied up in small sacks have been found in an abandoned building in central Thailand, national media reported on Thursday, in what authorities believe was a failed operation by illicit wildlife traffickers.

Footage from broadcaster Nation TV showed police and wildlife protection officers in the building in Saraburi province inspecting plastic crates containing sealed blue mesh bags with monkeys in each of them.

The video shows some monkeys trying to scamper away while still inside bags that were secured with string and plastic zip ties.

Wirom Wanalee, a resident, told Nation TV she and neighbours heard the monkeys' cries and found nearly 100 of them in the building.

They released most of them by cutting open the bags before reporting their discovery to police, Wirom said.

The Department of National Parks did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A police officer counts the monkeys found in bags in an abandoned house in Saraburi Province, Thailand February 17, 2022.
Image: Thai Department of Natural Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation (DNP)/Handout via REUTERS A police officer counts the monkeys found in bags in an abandoned house in Saraburi Province, Thailand February 17, 2022.

Officers from the parks department arrived to collect the remaining monkeys and take them to a wildlife quarantine centre near the capital, Bangkok, Nation TV said.

Thailand and the wider Southeast Asia is home to some of the world's most diverse flora and fauna, but the region has suffered from rampant poaching and trafficking of wildlife.

The pandemic halted much of the lucrative trade, but it is now picking back up as countries lift border restrictions, according to the United Nations.

Reuters

Monkeys found in bags in an abandoned house sit inside a crate in Saraburi Province, Thailand February 17, 2022.
Image: Thai Department of Natural Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation (DNP)/Handout via REUTERS Monkeys found in bags in an abandoned house sit inside a crate in Saraburi Province, Thailand February 17, 2022.
Monkeys found in bags are seen inside a crate in an abandoned house in Saraburi Province, Thailand February 17, 2022.
Image: Thai Department of Natural Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation (DNP)/Handout via REUTERS Monkeys found in bags are seen inside a crate in an abandoned house in Saraburi Province, Thailand February 17, 2022.