Photo: Save the Chimps
These chimpanzees are beginning their fresh start with a hug.
According toSave the Chimps, the nonprofit recently took over the care of Anna, April, Lucy, and Cash. The Ohio Department of Agriculture relinquished the four chimps, aged 13-26, to Save the Chimps.
Save the Chimps sanctuary workers drove to Ohio from Florida, picked upthe chimpanzees, and transported them to their new home. Upon arriving at the 150-acre sanctuary, the primates shared a sweet hug, which was caught on camera, seemingly celebrating their release from neglectful conditions.
Anna, April, Lucy, and Cash will spend two months together in one of the sanctuary’s large indoor enclosures to quarantine. Once the animals are through this period, they will join Save the Chimps’s other primates outdoors.
“These are extremely intelligent chimpanzees who deserve the chance to explore a larger world,” Dr. Andrew Halloran, Save the Chimps' director of chimpanzee behavior and care, said in a statement. “We look forward to seeing them thrive on a vast island habitat with 15-20 new lifelong companions, with the freedom to choose where they want to be and who they want to be with.”
Save the Chimps is home to over 220 chimpanzees retired or rescued from laboratories, the entertainment industry, the pet trade, and roadside zoos.
Save the Chimps
According toPeople for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), April, Anna, Lucy, and Cash’s old home wasa roadside zoothat received numerous animal welfare complaints.
PETA assisted in the chimps' rescue and donated to their future care at the sanctuary to give the animals the relaxing, loving life they deserve.
“It’s a happy new chapter for these four chimpanzees, who will have a great life, with lush grounds to explore and the opportunity to socialize with others of their kind,” said Brittany Peet, PETA’s general counsel for captive animal law enforcement. “PETA urges everyone to steer clear of roadside zoos as if animals' lives depend on it — because they do.”
Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
source: people.com