Monkey mayhem as wild animals wreak havoc in supermarket raid: video

Monkey mayhem as wild animals wreak havoc in supermarket raid: video

A group of wild monkeys raided a supermarket and made off with a haul of bananas in a bizarre hit-and-run theft in Thailand. 

The monkeys diverted from their normal foraging grounds in a nearby forest to hit a 7-11 and take what bananas they could. The video of the incident shows the monkeys ransacking plastic crates after they pull back the covers, taking food then running away in rotation.

When the shop workers try to chase the monkeys away, the monkeys just sit on the nearby wires out of reach. 

One onlooker told Viral Press that the monkeys have tried to “barge into the shop when staff cannot close the entrance quickly enough,” and that the monkeys have even stolen food out of tourists’ hands.

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“Luckily, they haven’t overrun the island yet,” he said, referring to Koh Phi Phi island, where the video was recorded and where many of the monkey incidents occur. 

Thailand has struggled with a small epidemic of wild monkeys in cities, most commonly of the macaque variety. These monkeys stand about two feet tall and weigh only 15 pounds, but they are aggressive and travel in groups.

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The monkeys have grown bolder in recent years, going after people and taking whatever food they can get their hands on. They can also cause bodily injuries that can result in hospitalization, according to Trip Savvy. 

On the mainland, residents of the city of Lopburi found themselves caught in the middle of a fight between hundreds of monkeys in two rival “gangs” that have started massive street brawls, sometimes over food, other times over territory: The monkeys in March 2020 fought over a single banana, while in 2021 monkeys fought over the right to squat at a Buddhist temple, Metro reported. 

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Prolonged and extensive lockdowns in the country may have allowed the monkeys to thrive, as well as giving them the confidence and comfort to move around freely in the cities, a government veterinarian said, explaining that the monkeys had grown used to tourists feeding them before the pandemic. 

“With the tourists gone, they’ve been more aggressive,” Supakarn Kaewchot said in 2021. “They’re invading buildings and forcing people to flee their homes.” 

More recently, the government has tried to manage the population by creating monkey sanctuaries, mass sterilization programs, habitat relocation and public education on how to handle the animals.

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