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Photo: Chris Hondros (Getty Images)<\/figcaption><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\nYou remember in Disney’s Moana<\/em>, when the people of Motunui wax lyrical about the benefits of the coconut, how they use “each part of the coconut, it’s all you need.” It’s a real jaunty tune.<\/p>\nNow imagine that same song but it takes place on a Thai coconut plantation, where monkeys are reportedly brutally forced to knock the coconuts from the trees before being kept in cages or tied to posts for hours, and the lyrics about how the land “gives us what we need, and no one leaves, \u201dtakes on a whole new meaning.<\/p>\n
As of Tuesday, the last two products you can find from Chaokoh on Walmart’s website<\/span> are cans Jack Fruit and Banana Blossom. This follows a multi-year PETA campaign<\/span> against the Thai brand over allegations of forced monkey labor. PETA confirmed that Walmart<\/span> had stopped selling the brand’s coconut products Monday. The brand is also no longer listed on Sam’s Club’s<\/span> site. <\/p>\nPETA’s campaign has been effective thanks to disturbing videos<\/span> alongside allegations that monkeys were being illegally abducted at a young age from their families, fitted with metal collars, and were exploited for their ability to climb trees and pick coconuts. Two separate 2019 and 2020 investigations documented how the monkeys were chained for extended periods of time, kept in cramped cages and left outside in the rain, had their canine teeth forcibly removed, and were isolated until they were “driven insane.”<\/p>\n“The coconut trade uses social monkeys as chained-up coconut-picking machines, depriving them of any opportunity to eat, play, or spend time with their families,” PETA’s executive VP Tracy Reiman said in a press release<\/span>. Reinman went on to say, “retailers are dropping Chaokoh left and right. “<\/p>\n\n
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