• EU Bans Testing on Great Apes!

    Written by PETA

    GOMA, CONGO - JULY 18:  Three-year old lowland gorilla Pinga rests July 18, 2006 at the Diane Fossey gorilla center in Goma, in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. She and other orphaned gorillas at the center were rescued from poachers and are now cared for by gorilla specialists trying to preserve the dwindling population of great apes in Congo. Some 4,000 lowland gorillas live in Congo, down from a population of more than 20,000 ten years ago. Recent years of war and chaos have depleted the population.  (Photo by John Moore/Getty Images)

    There's great news from across the Atlantic, where the European Union has voted to ban the use of great apes in experiments. The new legislation also places significant restrictions on testing on other primates and requires that non-animal methods be used whenever possible.

    This is an exciting development—but it also raises a question: In light of this humane advance, how can the U.S. government justify its plans to transfer more than 200 "retired" chimpanzees from a facility in New Mexico to a research laboratory in Texas, where they'll probably be forced to endure cruel experiments?

    There is no excuse for it, of course, so please help us persuade officials to permanently retire the chimpanzees to a sanctuary.

    Written by Jeff Mackey

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