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Wilson Nazario Torres fears the people of Guayama will suffer like those in his hometown, Lajas, which has been overrun by patas monkeys. The three that live in his back yard are so used to humans, he can't scare them away. "If this project was offered in any state in the United States, they wouldn't allow it," said Roberto Cintron, a 46-year-old resident of Carmen, a Guayama neighborhood close to the facility site. "So they come to an isolated community, a neglected community, and offer jobs, and people buy it." Bioculture Vice President Moses Mark Bushmitz said some groups are just trying to stir up panic. It happens at all new facilities. The Guayama facility is one of many already inside the United States, he said, where about 70,000 research monkeys were used in 2007, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The company assures people in Carmen and all of the Guayama district that its monkeys can't escape multiple levels of security. "You have monkeys in MIT, you have monkeys in Harvard," Bushmitz said. "So why isn't it an issue if the monkey will escape in Harvard, but it is an issue if a monkey will escape in Carmen?" Bushmitz called the protesters a small minority. "This area was neglected for so many years," he said. "The people here have no chance. The young guys have no work." But Carla Cappalli, a local animal rights activist, says opponents will keep fighting, no matter what the judge rules. "This is going to be a long case," she said. "We're going to fight this to the end."
[Associated
Press;
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