Anna wanted to desperately to see the loris’ in their natural habitat, so she travelled to the Indonesian Island of Java, a renowned biological hot spot abound with primates ranging from the tarsiers, Loris’ to monkeys and gibbons. The Island is supposedly a safe haven for the loris. But as she trekked through a protected jungle in the dead of night, she encountered not a single individual, where had they all gone? Eventually she and her local tracker managed to locate a lone loris clinging onto a surviving stand of bamboo, lost in one of the fields of vegetables planted by the inhabitants of a village that was barely fifty feet away. They watched as a creature, described as exclusively arboreal descended to the ground and walked clumsily across the ground. As I watched my strange looking primate cousin amble across the ground, I was struck at how similar it was to a tree sloth.

Next, the program shifted its attention to one of the most heart wrenching things I have ever witnessed in a documentary. The illegal pet trade is rife in places like Jakarta, despite the fact that it is totally illegal and that many of the animals being sold; including the Loris are protected species. Anna told us that the local police know what is going on, but they turn a blind eye to it. She wanted to investigate further, so she elected to go undercover as an ignorant western tourist, who was interested in buying an exotic pet. She approached dealers who kept the loris, along with monkeys, birds and cats in tiny, cramped cages; one dealer explained that the loris was very popular with Indonesian tourists, but also tourists from further afield, hailing from China, Japan and Russia. He told her that one animal sold for 25 US Dollars, to a Japanese tourist. After approaching several more, she witnessed something totally horrifying. A burly man lifted a relatively small crate onto the counter, Anna peered in and saw to her horror that it contained four Loris cramped together, with nothing to hold on to apart from each other. For Anna, this was the end; she made a quick getaway, just about holding herself together before she blew her cover. Once she was in the relative safety of the production van, she broke down and wept openly. At that point, I felt like crying too, not just for the plight of the loris, but also for the monkeys’ with their wide eyes full of fear, the same sort of fear you would recognise on a human face.

The loris’ abduction into the illegal pet trade however, is especially cruel. As I’ve mentioned the locals are all too aware of the toxic contained in the animal’s saliva. So what the dealers do is to remove their canines and lower incisors to ensure that they will not harm them or their prospective new owners. The problem comes when an illegally traded loris is then rescued by people like Anna, without its teeth, it cannot use its venom; therefore it can never be released back into the wild, sentencing them to a lifetime in captivity. Anna did mention that she had tried to rehabilitate rescued loris’ into the wild, but not one of them had managed to survive, purely because they need the venom to help with hunting but also for protection from a number of different things including their own kind.

Another shocking fact that emerged from this documentary was the fact that some loris owners had decided for whatever reason to post videos on YouTube of themselves tickling their pet. At first glance they do look cute, with their furry bodies, large heads and large eyes; they bear a strange resemblance to babies. We humans have a fixation on the cute and cuddly, we cannot help it, we seem to have a ‘cute’ instinct. But it is this very cuteness that may cost the loris its existence as a wild animal, thanks in part to the YouTube videos; demand for these primates has sky-rocketed. All I can say is that if you are thinking of getting one for a pet, then don’t; because you would help to fuel, what is an illegal industry and also denying a protected species a chance to live a natural existence. If you do watch the videos, then try to look past the cuteness, and understand that these people are breaking international law. The slow loris is a fascinating creature, the world’s only venomous mammal. Moreover it’s a primate, thus making it a close relative, the forward facing eyes and grasping hands that have nails rather than claws are a testament to that. It’s just one out of a large number of our closest relatives that need to be protected by us from us.