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Swiss to vote on fundamental rights for apes

primates - Swiss to vote on fundamental rights for apes

BASEL: Residents in the northern Swiss region of Basel-Stadt will take to the polls on coming Sunday to decide whether non-human anthropoids should enjoy the same basic rights as their human cousins.

RT reported the vote has been instigated by campaign group Sentience under Switzerland’s direct democracy system after amassing more than 100,000 signatures. The Swiss Supreme Court gave it the go-ahead after cantonal and city governments claimed the vote would violate federal law.

Sentience, which launched the campaign in 2016, said it was “thrilled at this historic decision,” after the supreme court threw out the regional government’s objections.

Basel-Stadt’s residents will vote on whether to give primates the right to life, as well as the right to “mental and physical integrity.”  Wealthy ‘puppeteer’ behind ‘foreign interference start-up’, security service says. “This will mark the first time worldwide that people can vote on fundamental rights for non-human animals,” the group claims.

The group says that all primates are highly intelligent and experience human-like feelings and emotions, such as pain, grief, and compassion. It adds that they also maintain an active social life.

“Non-human primates have a fundamental interest in their life and physical and mental integrity,” Sentience stated, adding: “However, this is hardly taken into account by the Swiss animal welfare legislation.” According to Sentience, some 150 primates live in the canton, which borders France and Germany.

Some experts have raised objections to the vote. Basel Zoo board member Olivier Pagan noted concerns around euthanasia. Zoo veterinarian Fabia Wyss concurred, noting that, under the proposals, if she put an animal to sleep, she would be putting herself beyond the law.

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