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Indonesia’s famous ‘selfie monkey’ under threat from hungry locals

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Among those living in Tangkoko is Naruto, who shot to fame after grabbing a British wildlife photographer’s camera and snapping some selfies. Photo: Handout
Agence France-Presse

The crested black macaque shot to fame when one of the monkeys snapped grinning selfies and became embroiled in a US court battle – but the tussle over copyright is the least of the rare animal’s worries.

In other places some macaque species are facing extinction because of shrinking habitat ... But here the habitat is getting smaller -- and people are eating the monkeys
Yunita Siwi, Selamatkan Yaki

In a remote corner of their native Indonesia, amid smoking volcanoes and dense jungles, the monkeys face a far greater threat as they are aggressively hunted to be eaten.

“In other places some macaque species are facing extinction because of shrinking habitat,” Yunita Siwi from Selamatkan Yaki, a foundation that campaigns to protect the primate, told AFP.

“But here the habitat is getting smaller – and people are eating the monkeys.”

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Authorities and activists are stepping up efforts to persuade villagers on Sulawesi island to stop consuming the critically endangered monkeys, one of many exotic creatures that form part of the local indigenous community’s diet.

The animal, whose scientific name is Macaca nigra, is part of a kaleidoscope of exotic wildlife found across Indonesia, including tigers and orangutans, who face a range of threats from poachers to the destruction of their habitat.

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On a recent trip to Sulawesi’s Tangkoko nature reserve, some of the amber-eyed, black-haired macaques, known in the local language as “yaki”, frolicked in a small river while others climbed palm trees and knocked coconuts to the ground.

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