Animal rights activists have blasted ‘cruel’ use of 115 monkeys in experiments at the Ministry of Defence’s warfare lab as the number tested for Ebola and turberculosis tripled in a year. 

Experts at Portdon Down, in Wiltshire, have been testing on marmoset monkeys in a bid to eradicate the deadly diseases.

The research was said to be aimed at understanding the development and spread of Ebola and TB in animals, with later experiments working on possible treatments.

But activists have hit out after a Freedom of Information request revealed that 115 monkeys were used for experiments, compared to the 45 in the previous 12 months. 

Experts at Portdon Down, in Wiltshire, have been testing on marmoset monkeys in a bid to eradicate the deadly diseases (file picture)

Experts at Portdon Down, in Wiltshire, have been testing on marmoset monkeys in a bid to eradicate the deadly diseases (file picture)

Experts at Portdon Down, in Wiltshire, have been testing on marmoset monkeys in a bid to eradicate the deadly diseases (file picture)

Experts at Portdon Down, in Wiltshire, have been testing on marmoset monkeys in a bid to eradicate the deadly diseases

Experts at Portdon Down, in Wiltshire, have been testing on marmoset monkeys in a bid to eradicate the deadly diseases

Experts at Portdon Down, in Wiltshire, have been testing on marmoset monkeys in a bid to eradicate the deadly diseases

Claire Palmer, of the Animal Justice Project, told the Daily Mirror: ‘Shockingly the number of monkeys has almost tripled in a year from 45. Further investigation on the types of primate experiments is a catalogue of cruel, repetitive experiments for infectious diseases.

‘Much current research focuses on attempts to improve available treatments by injecting animals with TB-causing bacteria or forcing them to inhale it – yet we do not appear any closer to eliminating the disease in humans.

‘We are still using the same vaccine that we had in the 1920s, and the same drugs that we had in the 1970s. 

‘The monkeys suffered depression, withdrawn behaviour and abnormal respiration – and up to 20% loss in body weight.’

Stocks of Ebola are kept at MoD’s research centre – a highly secretive location where work has long been done on chemical and biological weapons.

Revealing the scale of the Ebola research, officials said in 2014 that all the animals were awake when they were infected with the virus, then ‘humanely culled’ after tests or when their suffering became too severe.

Stocks of Ebola are kept at MoD's research centre - a highly secretive location where work has long been done on chemical and biological weapons

Stocks of Ebola are kept at MoD's research centre - a highly secretive location where work has long been done on chemical and biological weapons

Stocks of Ebola are kept at MoD’s research centre – a highly secretive location where work has long been done on chemical and biological weapons

Official figures at the time showed 200 mice and 56 marmosets were infected with the disease, which caused internal haemorrhaging, and then killed, over two years. 

Last year alone, 2,745 animals – including macaque monkeys, pigs, marmosets, rabbits and guinea pigs – were housed in Porton Down.

A spokesman for the MoD said: ‘While we are working to reduce the requirement for animal experimentation, some of this life-saving research cannot be conducted without using animals.’

Leave a Reply
You May Also Like

Animal Rebellion vow to unleash summer of chaos after eco-fanatics tried to disrupt Grand National

Animal Rising has vowed to unleash a summer of chaos after the…

China coronavirus: 110 US patients tested, SIXTH possible case

US federal health officials say they are investigating 110 possible American victims…

Sir Stirling Moss dies aged 90: Greatest all-round racing driver leaves huge hole in British sport

Sir Stirling Moss has died at the age of 90. The great…

Divorce rates in UK set to hit a 50-year high as unhappiness will reach highest levels ever

Divorce rates in the UK are set to hit a 50 year…