Captive orangutan has human right to freedom, Argentine court rules
BUENOS AIRES - Agence France-Presse
The orangutan named Sandra sits in her enclosure at Buenos Aires' Zoo in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Monday, Dec. 22, 2014. AP Photo
An orangutan held in an Argentine zoo can be freed and transferred to a
sanctuary after a court recognized the ape as a "non-human person"
unlawfully deprived of its freedom, local media has reported.
Animal
rights campaigners filed a habeas corpus petition - a document more
typically used to challenge the legality of a person's detention or
imprisonment - in November on behalf of Sandra, a 29-year-old Sumatran
orangutan at the Buenos Aires zoo.
In a landmark ruling that
could pave the way for more lawsuits, the Association of Officials and
Lawyers for Animal Rights (AFADA) argued the ape had sufficient
cognitive functions and should not be treated as an object.
The
court agreed Sandra, born into captivity in Germany before being
transferred to Argentina two decades ago, deserved the basic rights of a
"non-human person."
"This opens the way not only for other
Great Apes, but also for other sentient beings which are unfairly and
arbitrarily deprived of their liberty in zoos, circuses, water parks and
scientific laboratories," the daily La Nacion newspaper quoted AFADA
lawyer Paul Buompadre as saying.
Orangutan is a word from the Malay and Indonesian languages that means "forest man."
Sandra's
case is not the first time activists have sought to use the habeas
corpus writ to secure the release of wild animals from captivity.
A
U.S. court this month tossed out a similar bid for the freedom of
'Tommy' the chimpanzee, privately owned in New York state, ruling the
chimp was not a "person" entitled to the rights and protections afforded
by habeas corpus.
In 2011, the animal rights group People
for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) filed a lawsuit against
marine park operator SeaWorld, alleging five wild-captured orca whales
were treated like slaves. A San Diego court dismissed the case.
The Buenos Aires zoo has 10 working days to seek an appeal.
A
spokesman for the zoo declined to comment to Reuters. The zoo's head of
biology, Adrian Sestelo, told La Nacion that orangutans were by nature
calm, solitary animals which come together only to mate and care for
their young.
"When you don't know the biology of a species,
to unjustifiably claim it suffers abuse, is stressed or depressed, is
to make one of man's most common mistakes, which is to humanize animal
behaviour," Sestelo told the daily.