Monkey set to inherit fortunes worth millions from dead Indian couple
An Indian couple who were ostracised after their families disapproved of their wedding have decided to leave all their property to their pet monkey
chunmun.
The childless couple in India decided to bequeath their entire property, house, land and bank deposits to their pet monkey, news reports said on Thursday. Sabista and Brijesh Srivastava, residents of Rae Bareli in Uttar Pradesh State, have set up a trust that would oversee their property after their death. According to the couple, their main beneficiary will be their monkey, Chunmun.
The couple, who have no children, say they have raised him like a son.
The couple was in the process of selecting wildlife enthusiasts as members of the Chunmun Trust, which would look after the welfare of monkeys in India. Sabista Srivastava said she got her first monkey Tintin from a neighbour who was maltreating the animal and when she objected sold it to her. Tintin died soon after and the Srivastavas bought Chunmun in 2005 and brought him up in luxury.
According to the report, his room has an air-conditioner for the summer and a heater in winter. In 2010, Chunmun was married to Bitti, a female monkey. “Every year, on the monkeys’ wedding anniversary, the Srivastavas host a dinner for about 1,000 people and feed wild monkeys in the neighbourhood. “Ever since Tintin and Chunmun came into our lives, we have prospered and we feel it is due to them. “They are our children and it is our duty to ensure that they are well looked after even when we are gone,’’ Sabista Srivastava, a lawyer, was quoted as saying by Asian Age.
An Indian couple who were ostracised after their families disapproved of their wedding have decided to leave all their property to their pet monkey
chunmun.
The childless couple in India decided to bequeath their entire property, house, land and bank deposits to their pet monkey, news reports said on Thursday. Sabista and Brijesh Srivastava, residents of Rae Bareli in Uttar Pradesh State, have set up a trust that would oversee their property after their death. According to the couple, their main beneficiary will be their monkey, Chunmun.
The couple, who have no children, say they have raised him like a son.
The couple was in the process of selecting wildlife enthusiasts as members of the Chunmun Trust, which would look after the welfare of monkeys in India. Sabista Srivastava said she got her first monkey Tintin from a neighbour who was maltreating the animal and when she objected sold it to her. Tintin died soon after and the Srivastavas bought Chunmun in 2005 and brought him up in luxury.
According to the report, his room has an air-conditioner for the summer and a heater in winter. In 2010, Chunmun was married to Bitti, a female monkey. “Every year, on the monkeys’ wedding anniversary, the Srivastavas host a dinner for about 1,000 people and feed wild monkeys in the neighbourhood. “Ever since Tintin and Chunmun came into our lives, we have prospered and we feel it is due to them. “They are our children and it is our duty to ensure that they are well looked after even when we are gone,’’ Sabista Srivastava, a lawyer, was quoted as saying by Asian Age.
Although some street performers train the simians to entertain people and earn a living through them, correspondents say not many Indians are known to keep monkeys as pets.
In a rare case, a woman in the north-eastern state of Tripura was known to have adopted a monkey whom she used to breastfeed.



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