An Indonesian monkey who shot to fame after it snapped a grinning selfie – and sparked a landmark US copyright case – was named “Person of the Year” on Wednesday by the animal rights group.
The People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) said it was honoring Naruto, a crested black macaque with a goofy-looking grin, to recognize that ‘he is someone, not something’.
The photos quickly went viral and PETA launched a lawsuit that claimed the then six-year-old Naruto should be ‘declared the author and owner of his photograph’.
‘Naruto’s historic selfie challenged the idea of who is a person and who is not and resulted in the first-ever lawsuit seeking to declare a nonhuman animal the owner of property, rather than being declared property himself,’ PETA Founder Ingrid Newkirk said in a statement on Wednesday.
The court case set off an international debate among legal experts about personhood for animals and whether they can own property. The British photographer won the first hearing in California but PETA then appealed to a higher court. The case was settled in September – before that court could make a ruling – with Slater agreeing to donate 25 percent of any future revenue from using or selling the monkey selfies to help protect the habitat of crested macaques in Indonesia.
Post Your Comments