Escaping the clutches of alcoholism is never easy, and it certainly wasn't for Nicolas, who had to go on anti-depressants to cope with the withdrawal symptoms.
But thanks to the timely help of a Chilean treatment center, he has finally been able to get back to what he does best: being a monkey.
Nicolas, a tufted capuchin monkey, was abused in captivity by his owners -- shopkeepers in the Chilean capital Santiago.
They amused themselves by teaching him to smoke cigarettes and giving him alcohol.
"They liked to see his reactions when he drank. He became more aggressive, and that made them laugh," said veterinarian Nicole Rivera Helbig.
Nicolas, whose owners had his fangs removed, was made to drink so often he became addicted.
Today the small brown monkey, who gets camera-shy when journalists film him, is one of about 150 illegally trafficked animals recovering from various forms of abuse at the Primate Rehabilitation Center in Penaflor, on the outskirts of Santiago.
After going through a rehab program similar to the ones human addicts undergo, he is now in recovery.
But his case is not an isolated one.
"Alcohol, cigarettes and drugs are the most common things (abusive owners) give to monkeys, because they see it as a game," said Rivera.
One monkey was even taught to steal jewels from unsuspecting people on the street, while another, an aging female, was subjected to hormone treatments in a laboratory.
With lush trees and plants that seek to emulate the monkeys' natural environment, the rehabilitation center today hosts a range of species, from the gangly spider monkey to the pint-sized squirrel monkey.
Many bear the scars of mutilation, wounds from choke-hold leashes and other signs of abuse.
"Here, monkeys learn that they are monkeys," said the center's founder, Elba Munoz, a life-long animal lover who runs the facility with her family.
"When they're in (abusive) homes they aren't monkeys, they can't develop the normal behaviors of their species. So they're not monkeys. And they're not children either. They're nothing," she told AFP, against the din of her patients' shrieks and howls.
Munoz launched the center in 1994 after adopting a monkey herself.
She said it made her realize the horrific treatment exotic animals face at the hands of traffickers and abusive owners.
Animal trafficking is a persistent problem in Chile, where exotic pets are seen as chic status symbols.
Under Chilean law, trafficking in protected species is punishable by up to 60 days in prison and large fines.
But the penalties do not stop a heavy traffic in exotic animals across the Brazilian, Bolivian, Peruvian and Argentine borders.
Monkeys were all the rage in the 1990s, but then the fashion switched to exotic birds like toucans and macaws.
Read more at Discovery News
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