Spanish Parliament Extends Rights to Great Apes

MADRID, June 25 — Spain’s Parliament voiced its support today for the rights of great apes to life and freedom – apparently the first time any national legislature has called for such rights for non-humans.
The Parliament’s environmental committee approved resolutions urging Spain to comply with the Great Ape Project (GAP), devised by scientists and philosophers who say our closest genetic relatives deserve rights hitherto limited to humans.
“This is a historic day in the struggle for animal rights and in defence of our evolutionary comrades, which will doubtless go down in the history of humanity,” said Pedro Pozas, Spanish director of GAP - Spain.
Spain may be better known abroad for bullfighting than animal rights but the new measures are the latest move turning once conservative Spain into a liberal trailblazer.
Spain did not legalize divorce until the 1980s, but Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero’s Socialist government has legalized gay marriage, reduced the influence of the Catholic Church in education and set up an Equality Ministry.
The new resolutions have cross-party or majority support. They are expected to become law and the Government is now committed to update the statute book within a year to outlaw harmful experiments on apes in Spain.
“We have no knowledge of great apes being used in experiments in Spain, but there is currently no law preventing that from happening,” Mr Pozas said.
Keeping apes for circuses, television commercials or filming will also be forbidden, with breaking the new laws an offence under Spain’s penal code.
Keeping an estimated 315 apes in Spanish zoos will not be illegal, but supporters of the Bill say conditions will need to improve drastically in 70 percent of establishments to comply with the new law.
Philosophers Peter Singer and Paola Cavalieri founded GAP in 1993, arguing that “non-human hominids” like chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans and bonobos should enjoy the right to life, freedom and not to be tortured. In an e-mail to friends following the Spanish parliamentary decision, Singer wrote: “Congratulations everyone in Spain who has worked so hard on this. That’s wonderful and very exciting news!”
(Source: The Australian and OC staff)



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