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Hong Kong

Hong Kong's monkey population increasingly harassing hikers and residents for food

Academic says there are too many macaques and they are overdependent on humans who feed them despite the threat of prosecution

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The razor wire does not deter this wild monkey in Kam Shan country park. Photo: May Tse
Jessie Lau

While the Planet of the Apes films may be nothing more than Hollywood fantasy, Hongkongers could be forgiven for feeling like they live in a City of the Monkeys.

And while the city's 2,000 or so feral macaques may lack the super-intelligence that drives their big-screen counterparts - back in cinemas with the new film Dawn of the Planet of the Apes - they can send hikers and residents nuts.

Despite efforts to control them, the monkeys eagerly chase country park visitors for food and have even strayed into teeming urban areas like Mong Kok and Tsim Sha Tsui.

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In the latest incident last week, one was nabbed outside a Lam Tin public library.

"They are taking over," said an elderly hiker who regularly frequents the monkeys' main domain at Kam Shan, popularly known as "Monkey Hill".

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"They are annoying … one pushed my bag when they saw bread peeking out," said the hiker

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