The extraction of Guinea’s large mineral wealth by China is being used as a smoke screen for the illegal trafficking of great apes from the continent say UN conservationists.
As China continues to push its economic development, precious resources in some of the most remote corners of Guinea are being pumped out of the country to aid China’s growth as the new super power.
But while there are legitimate contracts for mining bauxite for aluminium, iron reserves, gold and cobalt, the large presence of Chinese miners in the area has also created an underground network of traffickers pushing the trade in live chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) and in some cases gorillas (Gorilla).
Yesterday wildlife experts meeting in Paris for a three-day conference at the UNESCO headquarters said in the last two years the number of great apes smuggled out of Guinea for use in Chinese zoos is estimated to be at least 138. Conservationists attending the conference called for this illegal trade to be stopped now if these species are to have any hope of long-term survival in the wild.
The numbers are shocking especially when put into context that for every infant chimpanzee taken at least ten members of its family group have died trying to protect it. Chimpanzees have slow reproductive rates their populations are unlikely to bounce back if they suffer large losses to their numbers. Present estimates put the number of wild chimpanzees in Africa at around 200,000. In west Africa the greatest number is thought to be in Guinea.
According to the Pan African Sanctuary Alliance (PASA), a non governmental organisation campaigning for primate welfare, infant chimpanzees imported from Guinea have been put on display at two Chinese zoos since 2010 – the Jinan Zoo (Shandong Province) and the Hefei Wildlife Park (Anhui Province).
Great apes such as chimpanzees and gorillas are protected under international law. It is illegal to transfer wild-caught specimens out of Africa. There are no captive breeding facilities and no zoos in Guinea or in neighbouring countries such as Sierra Leone, Cote d’Ivoire, or Guinea Bissau. Scientists who are monitoring the situation in Guinea say the apes being smuggled out are being ordered specifically for zoos in China.
Doug Cress the UN’s Great Ape Survival Project (GRASP) Co-ordinator, who is attending the Paris conference, told me: “It’s not just about protecting a species or a habitat anymore. The world has gotten much more complex, and we need to take into account numerous human issues if great apes are to survive.
“Daily flights from Conakry to China have been running since mining started. Chimpanzees are being caught, stuffed into crates and packed onto a flight with no questions asked. Each one costs around $25,000, with gorillas brought into Guinea and shipped off selling for around $40,000 each. Current export controls at the airport are unsatisfactory and we believe corruption and gross incompetence by officials are allowing this trade to thrive.
“It seems hardly credible that no one has been suspicious of the shipments of such high-profile endangered species. We are calling on CITES to investigate. If, as expected, the transfers are illegal or the transfers used forged documents, we need CITIES to direct the authorities in China to confiscate these animals and return them to their country of origin.”
Scientists in Paris are expected to discuss strategies to try to mitigate the problem which has raised grave concern among primatologists.

Conservationists are keen to avoid other apes being subjected to scenes like this. Four-year-old male chimpanzee Yangyang (L) holds the hand of six-year-old female chimpanzee Wan Xing as they get married at a zoo in Hefei, in east China’s Anhui province, on September 28, 2010.
Professor Richard Wrangham, who splits his time between the Kibale Chimpanzee Project in Uganda and the Department of Human Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University said: “We have to get it right for great ape conservation, and we have to get it right now. We need a renewed commitment to conservation that not only halts those declines, but actually begins to reverse those trends.”
Mr Cress says mining and its impacts on primate habitat is such a serious threat it’s being described “as the new logging”.
He added: “The Chinese are bringing their own labourers into remote areas and wildlife trafficking is a lucrative illegal trade. Law enforcement for wildlife is non-existent in Guinea. It’s likely that permits have been falsified or stolen for shipments to pass through.”
According to Interpol, the international police organisation, global environmental crime is believed to be “serious, trans-national and organised”. Last month China hosted its first National Environmental Security Seminar in Beijing with the support of Interpol. China pledged to develop opportunities to enhance its environmental record, but in March this year Interpol published statistics on global environmental crime which showed China had illegally exported 69 chimpanzees from Guinea in 2010, and at least 130 had been taken in the past three years.
John Scanlon, the Secretary-General of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), is expected to deliver a keynote address at today’s session in Paris. “For some species, it is quite literally their last hope, if they are not to disappear from the face of our planet,” he said. “Every time a protected species is poached, every time a skin is smuggled across a border, every time a body part or product enters an illicit market, the conservation community has failed, and we are one step closer to the extinction of that animal in the wild.”
Kingchi Tam
November 7, 2012
As a Chinese researcher on great apes, I want to vomit… I have a friend who works for Chinese CITES, and she said these Guinea chimps were listed as “captive-born”…
urbanprimate
November 7, 2012
Thanks for your comment. Regardless of whether the chimps pictured are captive born or not – as a researcher of great apes I hope you are horrified that an endangered species like this is being subjected to being dressed up and paraded around as entertainment for people. For your information The Guinea chimp (male I believe) was reported as being born in Guinea. Reports say he was “moved” to China. Even if he was “moved” to China, they should not have forced him into a taking part in this sort of spectacle.
Dave Hull
November 8, 2012
In complete agreement with you, Asha. Thank you for highlighting this abysmal situation. Beautifully written, as usual.
Kingchi Tam
November 13, 2012
yes, this is absolutely horrifying. china has no animal welfare law and their wildlife conservation law is based on the principle to maximize the useage of wildlife resources. animal performance is disturbingly prevalent. and illegal import of exotic species is not limited to african apes… what is worse, they have censorship. i have asked my friend whether we should translate this blogpost and post it into chinese websites, and she said it won’t last long…. PASA had an outcry about these guinea chimps and you could not find any info about this inside china. and in fact, the environment department in china strongly endorsed these imports, i.e. there is government level pressure. so the captive-born status is likely fake too.
urbanprimate
November 13, 2012
Dear Kingchi,
Oh what a relief to know that you feel this way. I think I misread how you had written your last comment. My apologies. Yes censorship is tight over there, and people tend to be fed information driven by the powers that be.
A
caesar
November 7, 2012
Hi Asha
Hope you are well!!!!!!!! I’m off to Brazil in early December and have got my friends out there to arrange for me to go into the Amazon with some experienced guides who also monitor welfare of Primates in that part of the world…
You tend to focus most of your attention on African issues (as the above post demonstrates).
However, there is serious human interference in South America with regard to Primate exploitation and threats to the existence of several wonderful species….
‘There are so many species of monkeys in the Amazon rain forest that scientist have not yet discovered all of them. In fact, in early 2009 a brand-new species, Mura’s tamarin, was found in a remote part of Brazil—and it’s already considered to be an imperiled species because of habitat loss due to the logging and burning of the rain forest.’ – Just to mention one example!!
Finally the pics above are a disgrace…its really sickening to see how humans can be so thoughtless.
Many Thanks for the updates!
KR
Caesar
urbanprimate
November 13, 2012
It’s not intentional focusing on Africa, but this was an original story that I found out speaking to GRASP. It is nice to break stories rather than to follow on-the-day news.I hope you have a great time in Brazil, lucky man!!
A