The Prague Post - Colombia's lonely chimp Yoko finds new home in Brazil

EUR -
AED 4.245326
AFN 80.435416
ALL 98.163229
AMD 441.570633
ANG 2.068761
AOA 1058.873848
ARS 1366.528467
AUD 1.778343
AWG 2.083647
AZN 1.954014
BAM 1.960109
BBD 2.327937
BDT 140.899717
BGN 1.9599
BHD 0.435919
BIF 3432.986781
BMD 1.155976
BND 1.480829
BOB 7.967514
BRL 6.409314
BSD 1.153005
BTN 99.214654
BWP 15.497664
BYN 3.773131
BYR 22657.129483
BZD 2.316011
CAD 1.56981
CDF 3325.742991
CHF 0.93778
CLF 0.028244
CLP 1083.841777
CNY 8.301756
CNH 8.304301
COP 4778.215211
CRC 581.167431
CUC 1.155976
CUP 30.633364
CVE 110.507912
CZK 24.8047
DJF 205.314204
DKK 7.458865
DOP 68.098512
DZD 150.407635
EGP 58.56267
ERN 17.33964
ETB 155.550129
FJD 2.596033
FKP 0.851126
GBP 0.851521
GEL 3.167243
GGP 0.851126
GHS 11.876105
GIP 0.851126
GMD 81.492932
GNF 9990.78827
GTQ 8.860477
GYD 241.230257
HKD 9.073972
HNL 30.092627
HRK 7.534655
HTG 151.209764
HUF 402.489451
IDR 18836.74442
ILS 4.111258
IMP 0.851126
INR 99.501676
IQD 1510.407016
IRR 48666.589008
ISK 144.011453
JEP 0.851126
JMD 184.605789
JOD 0.819575
JPY 166.483083
KES 148.967451
KGS 101.090273
KHR 4623.122265
KMF 493.062085
KPW 1040.378395
KRW 1573.364065
KWD 0.353647
KYD 0.960795
KZT 591.384597
LAK 24877.037534
LBP 103305.210731
LKR 345.229903
LRD 230.598909
LSL 20.749672
LTL 3.413296
LVL 0.699239
LYD 6.299629
MAD 10.542273
MDL 19.744547
MGA 5206.309068
MKD 61.539959
MMK 2427.442993
MNT 4139.836613
MOP 9.32161
MRU 45.773825
MUR 52.585878
MVR 17.807813
MWK 1999.242726
MXN 21.875198
MYR 4.905972
MZN 73.925084
NAD 20.749672
NGN 1786.549407
NIO 42.432538
NOK 11.439001
NPR 158.746199
NZD 1.917026
OMR 0.444471
PAB 1.153035
PEN 4.161748
PGK 4.816504
PHP 65.316078
PKR 326.869722
PLN 4.270055
PYG 9199.904311
QAR 4.206045
RON 5.026417
RSD 117.219406
RUB 91.902925
RWF 1664.945376
SAR 4.339887
SBD 9.649383
SCR 16.44787
SDG 694.165377
SEK 10.971686
SGD 1.481054
SHP 0.908416
SLE 25.489079
SLL 24240.242842
SOS 658.948459
SRD 43.381493
STD 23926.36917
SVC 10.089002
SYP 15029.88867
SZL 20.736043
THB 37.521248
TJS 11.645297
TMT 4.045916
TND 3.411699
TOP 2.707413
TRY 45.573302
TTD 7.818984
TWD 34.095472
TZS 2990.142285
UAH 47.825686
UGX 4155.133554
USD 1.155976
UYU 47.404201
UZS 14650.139652
VES 118.102553
VND 30161.147648
VUV 137.679601
WST 3.027719
XAF 657.396361
XAG 0.031804
XAU 0.000338
XCD 3.124083
XDR 0.817576
XOF 657.396361
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.307068
ZAR 20.693791
ZMK 10405.171932
ZMW 27.873305
ZWL 372.223798
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Colombia's lonely chimp Yoko finds new home in Brazil
Colombia's lonely chimp Yoko finds new home in Brazil / Photo: Raul ARBOLEDA - AFP

Colombia's lonely chimp Yoko finds new home in Brazil

Kidnapped from his family as an infant, then raised by a drug lord before ending up in a Colombian zoo, Yoko the chimpanzee has lived the last two years of his life alone.

Text size:

He lost his last friend, Chita, in 2023 when she escaped from the zoo with Pancho -- Yoko's rival -- and the pair was shot dead by soldiers out of human safety concerns.

On Sunday, 38-year-old Yoko was flown to Brazil to finally join others of his kind at a sanctuary there.

But will he make friends?

Yoko is in many ways more human than chimp, his caregivers say. He uses a knife and fork, plays ball, watches television and makes artwork with crayons on paper and canvas.

He is fond of eating sweets and chicken.

Fed junk food by his captor -- a narco trafficker whose name has not been divulged -- Yoko has only four of his teeth left. Chimps, like humans, are meant to have 32.

It was common for narco bosses such as Pablo Escobar in the 1990s to keep exotic animals as pets, including tigers and lions, and even hippos and giraffes.

Yoko was taught to smoke and dress up in human clothes -- causing him to develop a skin disease and lose part of his fur.

"Yoko... is a highly humanized chimpanzee, the degree of tameness is very high... He basically behaves like a child," said veterinarian Javier Guerrero.

The vet accompanied Yoko on the first part of his journey, dubbed "Operation Noah's Ark," from Ukumari Biopark, a zoo in the Colombian city of Pereira.

- A smile is not a smile -

Experts fear Yoko may find it hard to adapt to life with other chimpanzees at Sorocaba in the Brazilian state of Sao Paolo -- the largest great ape sanctuary in Latin America.

There are more than 40 other chimps there, but vets and animal behaviorists worry Yoko may not fit in.

"Yoko... is not a chimpanzee in the strict sense... he is an animal that identifies much more with human beings," said Cesar Gomez, Ukumari's animal training coordinator.

"To give you an example, a smile is something positive" for humans, "but for chimpanzees, it is something negative and Yoko does not understand these types of communication," he said.

Yoko was seized from his owner's lair by police in 2017 after spending an unknown amount of time there, then taken to a refuge that flooded before he became a resident of the Pereira zoo.

"He was denied the chance to be a chimpanzee and grow up with his family," assistant vet Alejandra Marin told AFP.

In the wild in their natural home in Africa, chimpanzees die at about 40 or 45 years of age. They are social, group animals, and with good care in captivity, they can live up to 60.

The chimpanzee is listed as an endangered species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

With Yoko's transfer Sunday, Colombia became the first country in the world to rid itself of entirely captive great apes, said the Great Ape Project, an NGO.

"The great apes are chimpanzees, orangutans, gorillas, and bonobos -- none of these species are endemic to our country, and they have no reason to be here," said Andrea Padilla, a Colombian senator of the Green Alliance who oversaw Yoko's "deeply symbolic" transfer.

"From a very young age, Yoko was a victim of trafficking and trade, passed from one drug trafficker to another," she added.

On Monday morning, Padilla posted on X that Yoko had landed in Brazil, and was "safe and sound and about to start a new life with his peers."

W.Urban--TPP