A 15-year-old orangutan named ‘Tori’ has been smoking cigarettes at an Indonesian zoo for a decade, but she is willing to quit now. Zookeepers said that they plan to move Tori away from visitors who regularly throw lit cigarettes into her cage so they can watch and photograph her puffing away and flicking ashes on the ground. The primate mimics human behavior, holding cigarettes casually between her fingers while taking long drags and blowing bursts of smoke out her nostrils to the delight of visitors.
Results of a medical test are expected to determine how much Tori’s smoking has affected her health, said Hardi Baktiantoro of the Borneo-based Center for Orangutan Protection, which is helping to coordinate the intervention. A mesh cover will initially be placed over Tori’s cage, and later she will be moved to a small island away from the public, he said. Several Indonesian zoos have come under scrutiny following animal deaths, including a giraffe that died in the long-troubled Surabaya Zoo in March with an 18-kilogram ball of plastic in its stomach after years of ingesting trash thrown into its enclosure by visitors. Indonesia is also one of the last remaining countries where tobacco companies face few restrictions on selling, advertising and promoting products.