For Immediate Release:
October 18, 2021
Contact:
Brooke Rossi 202-483-7382
Salt Lake City â As head of some of the few grocery chains still selling coconut milk obtained through forced monkey labor, Associated Food Stores CEO Robert Obray will receive a special delivery this week from PETA: a dozen fresh, humanely obtained coconuts meant to remind him that monkeys forced to pick coconuts are chained, isolated, and even driven insane. PETA is asking Obray to reconsider Associated Food Storesâ business relationship with Chaokoh, a major offender.
âCoconuts are sweet, but the ways monkeys in Thailand are deprived and exploited to pick them is anything but,â says PETA President Ingrid Newkirk. âPETA hopes to see Associated Food Stores agree that smart, sensitive primates donât deserve to be subjected to bitter lives of forced labor.â
PETAâwhose motto reads, in part, that âanimals are not ours to abuse in any wayââopposes speciesism, a human-supremacist worldview. For more information, please visit PETA.org or follow the group on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.
PETAâs letter to Obray follows.
October 18, 2021
Robert Obray, CEO
Associated Food Stores
Dear Mr. Obray:
Greetings from PETA. We applaud Associated Food Stores for offering tasty vegan products for your customers, and we now urge you to take action on an issue that many of them are concerned about. Weâve sent you these coconuts in the hope of finally cracking open a dialog about reconsidering your business relationship with Chaokoh, a brand implicated in PETA Asiaâs investigation into the use of chained monkeysâsome whose canine teeth were removed and all of whom were forcibly trainedâin Thailandâs coconut industry.
PETA Asiaâs investigation revealed that Chaokoh is part of an industry thatâs forcing monkeysâtaken from their troupes, confined for life, and often driven insane from being deprived of everything thatâs natural and important to themâto climb trees and collect coconuts. Most, if not all, of these animals are illegally captured in the forest as babies. Please visit PETA.org/Coconuts to watch the undercover video footage.
More than 33,000 other stores, including Target, have decided to stop purchasing products from Chaokoh.
We hope you will act swiftly to remove cruelly sourced coconut products from your shelves. May we please hear from you soon?
Very truly yours,
Ingrid Newkirk
President
Source: Peta.org