Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

IKEA Monkey Needs Help Keeping Roof Over Its Head, Sanctuary Appeals For Funds

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Apr, 2015 12:14 PM
    TORONTO — The Ikea monkey needs help keeping a roof over its head.
     
    Darwin the monkey — whose story went viral in December 2012 when he was found wandering outside an Ikea store wearing a shearling coat — has been living at Ontario's Story Book Farm Primate Sanctuary ever since a court placed him in its care.
     
    The sanctuary in Sunderland, Ont., east of Toronto, has been trying to raise money for a move to new premises since late last year but says donations have dried up and "the situation is desperate."
     
    Story Book is now launching a renewed push for funds, saying it will be evicted from its current premises on June 30.
     
    Daina Liepa, a member of the sanctuary's board of directors, says Story Book is "out of options and out of money."
     
    The sanctuary is appealing to the public as it seeks to raise $250,000 to give Darwin and his fellow primates a new home.
     
    "At Story Book Farm, these primates are given dignity and allowed to be who they are as much as possible. But two more turns of the calendar and they will be homeless and with no reasonable options for living quarters," Liepa wrote in a letter to supporters. "Story Book Farm can be saved but they can’t do it alone."
     
    Darwin is mentioned by name in the sanctuary's latest call for financial help, but Story Book notes it houses 20 monkeys.
     
    Darwin became something of an international celebrity after he escaped from a crate in his owner's car parked in a Toronto Ikea parking lot.
     
    Images of him in his tiny beige shearling coat as he wandered all the way into the store triggered a social media frenzy.
     
    Animal services seized him and sent him to Story Book, prompting his owner, Yasmin Nakhuda to sue the sanctuary in an effort to get him back.
     
    An Ontario Superior Court justice then ruled that Darwin is a wild animal and that Nakhuda's ownership ended with his escape from her car.
     
    Nakhuda decided to appeal the ruling but abandoned her effort, saying it was too costly and had little chance of success.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Divers Recover Body Of Alberta Man From Columbia River In B.C.

    RCMP Divers Recover Body Of Alberta Man From Columbia River In B.C.
    GOLDEN, B.C. — Members of an RCMP dive team have recovered the body of a missing 27-year-old Alberta man from the Columbia River in  eastern British Columbia.

    RCMP Divers Recover Body Of Alberta Man From Columbia River In B.C.

    B.C. Man Who Nearly Killed Mom With Toddler Complains About Lawyer

    B.C. Man Who Nearly Killed Mom With Toddler Complains About Lawyer
    KELOWNA, B.C. — A B.C. man who nearly killed a young mother while her toddler was nearby expressed no remorse when he spoke at his dangerous-offender hearing.

    B.C. Man Who Nearly Killed Mom With Toddler Complains About Lawyer

    Mountie Who Fired Taser Lied At Inquiry Into Dziekanski's Death: B.C. Judge

    VANCOUVER — The RCMP officer who stunned Robert Dziekanski with a Taser at Vancouver's airport lied at a public inquiry, a judge ruled Friday, marking the first guilty verdict of any kind related to the Polish immigrant's death.

    Mountie Who Fired Taser Lied At Inquiry Into Dziekanski's Death: B.C. Judge

    Vancouver Aquarium Beluga On 'breeding Loan' To Florida Seaworld Dies

    Orlando SeaWorld posted a statement on its Facebook page Friday confirming the death of Nanuq, a male beluga estimated to be around 31 or 32 years old.

    Vancouver Aquarium Beluga On 'breeding Loan' To Florida Seaworld Dies

    B.C. Ballot Blunder To Cost Thousands Of Dollars: Teachers' Union

    B.C. Ballot Blunder To Cost Thousands Of Dollars: Teachers' Union
    VANCOUVER — The union representing British Columbia teachers says the profession's regulatory branch has bungled an election by mailing out voting packages without ballots.

    B.C. Ballot Blunder To Cost Thousands Of Dollars: Teachers' Union

    Winnipeg Mom Found Not Guilty To Abandonment For Leaving Child, 6, Alone

    Winnipeg Mom Found Not Guilty To Abandonment For Leaving Child, 6, Alone
    WINNIPEG — A Winnipeg mom has been found not guilty of child abandonment after leaving her six-year-old son home alone for 90 minutes.

    Winnipeg Mom Found Not Guilty To Abandonment For Leaving Child, 6, Alone