Monday, June 01, 2026

 

How a little monkey became a meme phenomenon

01.06.2026, DPA

Photo: -/@ichikawa_zoo/dpa

Born in a Tokyo zoo and rejected by his mother, baby monkey Punch found comfort in a cuddly toy. That won him fans worldwide who shared his image, moved by his loneliness and inspired by his resilience.

By Lars Nicolaysen and Jan Mies, dpa

His story moved millions around the world to tears: the plight of a young Japanese macaque named Punch. Rejected by his mother shortly after birth at a zoo near Japan's capital, Tokyo, he found comfort in a toy orangutan.

Heart-wrenching videos of the little monkey being chased by other macaques in his enclosure, dragging his soft toy behind him, swiftly went viral.

In countless memes, Punch became a symbol of contemporary anxieties – loneliness, vulnerability, but also resilience.

Keepers at Ichikawa City Zoo suspect that Punch's mother may have been overwhelmed by the intense summer heat during her first birth.

In such situations, mother animals often prioritize their own survival.

Stuffed toy as surrogate mother

Shortly after birth, macaque infants typically cling to their mother's fur for warmth, security and development. Deprived of this, Punch initially sought alternatives such as rolled-up towels provided by keepers.

But he ultimately gravitated toward a stuffed orangutan from Ikea’s toy collection.

After the zoo featured Punch with his stuffed toy on X, the hashtag #HangInTherePunch and its Japanese equivalent went viral.

Early footage shows Punch being pushed away by other macaques or dragged aggressively around in circles before he runs behind a rock and clings to his soft toy.

Later clips showing another monkey grooming and comforting him briefly reassured many viewers online. In other moments, Punch is seen leaving his surrogate companion to interact and play with others.

"Punch is us"

"Our aim is for him to live in a group," Takashi Yasunaga, the head of the Ichikawa City Council department responsible for the Tokyo zoo, tells dpa. "I believe he is well on his way there."

What some on social media view as bullying is, according to experts, perfectly normal behaviour among macaques. Yet many interpret the videos as behaviour they recognize from their own lives.

"Punch is us. We are Punch. Punch is more than a little monkey. He is all of us," one user posted on Instagram. "In every shy glance and every brave step, we see ourselves. We see resilience, curiosity, and the quiet courage it takes to keep going," says the post, whose popularity suggests millions of others on social media feel and think the same way.

"Watching Punch find refuge in his plushie reminds us that sometimes, comfort isn’t just a 'luxury,' it’s the only place where the world feels safe again," writes another, expressing the general sense of world-weariness in times of war and crisis.

Unsurprisingly, Punch has also resonated strongly in Japan, where loneliness is a growing social issue in an aging society.

What connects Punch to a penguin

Punch has frequently been compared online to a solitary penguin from Werner Herzog's documentary "Encounters at the End of the World" (2007), who breaks away from his group and walks alone toward the distant mountains instead of toward the sea.

Clips from Herzog's melancholic narration also went viral earlier this year. Like Punch, the penguin has been embraced online as a figure of individuality and quiet determination.

"The interest in many of these animal stories stems from the fact that they are easy to reinterpret. Animal stories are simple – you don't have to ask why; you have a basic sympathy for them that requires no further research," says German philosopher Kai Denker, who specializes in meme research, in an interview with dpa.

"By reducing complexity, the stories make it easy to feel empathy. It's a kind of feel-good zone – which can also be a form of escapism," he says.

"Many can easily be translated into hero stories, in which the dramatic triangle of hero, villain and victim can be found. Here, Punch is the victim, the other monkey the villain. For example, you could see weightlifters using this to motivate themselves to train in order to defend Punch," says Denker.

A meme on X, inspired by the science fiction film "Planet of the Apes," shows a grim-faced monkey with a rifle and a stuffed orangutan in his arms – suggesting that in 2030, Punch will take his revenge.

Vienna Festival cancels IT investor Thiel's appearance after criticism

31.05.2026, DPA

Photo: Christiane Oelrich/dpa

The Vienna Festival cancelled an upcoming appearance by US right-wing IT investor Peter Thiel after growing criticism of a planned event, the organizers said in an Instagram post on Saturday. 

Director and festival director Milo Rau, known for his political projects, had championed a public discussion evening with Thiel in June and Thiel had confirmed his attendance.

The US billionaire, who originally comes from Germany, is known for his libertarian and right-wing conservative views, for being a close supporter of US President Donald Trump and his criticism of liberal democracies. Recent reports about Thiel's apocalyptic worldview also made headlines. 

Festival artists and participants withdrew from the event due to the plans to feature Thiel. Their cancellations weakened the festival "to an unacceptable extent," which is why the management has decided to cancel the debate with Peter Thiel, the organizers said. 

Other critical voices have also become increasingly prominent, according to the festival, which is funded by the City of Vienna. Vienna's City Councillor for Culture, Veronica Kaup-Hasler, told Der Standard newspaper: "The invitation to Peter Thiel is quite rightly causing great discontent among the public."

However, many festival-goers were looking forward to the discussion, to be held under the title "Armageddon and the Antichrist? From Theology to Realpolitik." Some saw this as a chance for Thiel to put his views forward and respond to counter-arguments, they said at a public forum on the pros and cons of Thiel's appearance staged by Rau on Friday.

Thiel is co-founder and chairman of the software company Palantir which specializes in analysing large datasets and provides software used by intelligence and military agencies. 

The company's software is used by agencies including the US Department of Homeland Security and the Pentagon. Controversy over whether security agencies should rely on Palantir's controversial data analysis products has sparked debate in many countries.

Netherlands gives go-ahead for Kanye West concerts

29.05.2026, DPA

Despite fierce protests, US rapper Kanye West will be allowed to perform in the Netherlands in early June as planned, after Minister for Asylum and Migration Bart van den Brink said on Friday that there is no legal basis for refusing him entry.

Van den Brink, who is also deputy prime minister, acknowledged that parliament had voted in favour by a large majority to bar West, but said that alone was insufficient to justify an entry ban.

The minister condemned the anti-Semitic remarks made by West, who now performs under the name Ye. However, past remarks were not legally sufficient grounds to now ban him from entering the country, he said. Previously, performances in other countries had been banned or cancelled.

The city of Arnhem, on the border with Germany, granted permission for the 48-year-old rapper’s concerts on June 6 and 8. The mayor said the city could only revoke a permit if there was a threat to public safety.

Jewish organizations reacted with outrage. “It is incomprehensible that the Netherlands is unable to draw a moral line regarding who is offered a stage and who is not,” said Naomi Mestrum, director of the Centre for Information and Documentation on Israel (CIDI).

The UK has refused the musician entry. In Poland, a planned concert was cancelled by the organizers. West himself cancelled a performance in France due to the threat of a ban.

The rapper had made anti-Semitic remarks on several occasions, released a song titled "Heil Hitler" and sold T-shirts featuring swastikas. Following protests, he apologized for some of his comments and attributed his behaviour to a mental health condition..

 

Cave explorer rescued from a depth of 120 metres in Italy

01.06.2026, DPA

A cave explorer was rescued in northern Italy after an hours-long operation by emergency services.

The man became trapped on Sunday in the Grotta dei Cinghiali Volanti cave near Garessio in the Piedmont region after his leg was pinned beneath a rock at a depth of around 120 metres.

On Monday morning the mountain rescue service reported that the man – an Italian in his 20s – had been freed and was taken to hospital.

More than 50 rescue workers were involved in the operation, which was complicated by the challenging underground environment and difficult terrain.

The rescue teams eventually reached the caver, removed the rock and freed him. While still underground, the rescue team set up a small medical treatment centre, where an initial medical assessment was carried out. 

The mountain rescue service determined his condition was good, so he did not need to be carried out of the narrow cave on a stretcher.

The cave is situated at an altitude of around 1,200 metres in the Rocca d'Orse-Val d'Inferno karst region, and is a popular destination. 

The TV channel RAI reported that there are more than 600 explored caves, shafts and large underground systems in the area.

PLAGUE SHIP

Hondius cruise ship ready to sail again after hantavirus outbreak

01.06.2026, DPA

Hondius cruise ship in the port of Rotterdam - FILE PHOTO - The cruise ship "Hondius" docks at the pier in the port of Rotterdam. (is associated with: «Hondius cruise ship ready to sail again after hantavirus outbreak»)

Photo: -/dpa

The cruise ship at the centre of a hantavirus outbreak has been disinfected and is ready to set sail again with passengers, its operator said on Monday.

The Hondius is to depart on June 6 for Norwegian Arctic archipelago of Svalbard. From there, it is due to set off on June 13 on a voyage through the Arctic Ocean, the Dutch cruise line Oceanwide Expeditions announced.

Specialists from Dutch health authorities carried out a comprehensive cleaning and disinfection of the ship. Authorities cleared the vessel for service over the weekend, and there is no longer any risk of infection, the company said.

Preliminary investigations indicate that the hantavirus was brought aboard by passengers and did not originate on the ship, Oceanwide Expeditions said.

All crew members from the previous voyage are still in quarantine, it said. "A crew transition has taken place, with no crew members on board having had any contact with individuals currently in quarantine."

In May, it emerged that several people on board the cruise ship had been infected with the hantavirus, a rodent-borne disease that can cause severe respiratory illness.Three people died and several were infected. 

The virus in question was the so-called Andes variant, which is found primarily in South America and is transmissible from person to person.

At the time of the outbreak, the ship was en route from Argentina to the Canary Islands. In Tenerife, the passengers and most crew members were able to disembark and fly to their home countries.

The World Health Organization had confirmed that there was no risk of a major wave of infection or a pandemic. According to experts, infection is far more difficult than with, for example, the flu virus or Covid-19.

Germany sees lowest level of rubbish since 2009

01.06.2026, DPA

Photo: Marijan Murat/dpa

Germans threw away less waste in 2024, with the total volume falling to its lowest level since 2009, the country's Federal Statistical Office reported on Monday. 

Preliminary results show that 362.7 million tons of waste were generated – 4.6% less than in the previous year.

By way of comparison, the highest figure to date was recorded in 2018 at 417.2 million tons, and the lowest in 2009 at 359.4 million tons. The statisticians released the figures to mark Environment Day on June 5.

Construction and demolition waste fell most significantly (down 8.1%) to 182.8 million tons. This accounts for around half of the total waste generated.

Other waste – particularly from manufacturing and industry – fell by 4.1% to 45.1 million tons, followed by secondary waste already processed in a waste treatment plant, which fell by 2% to 56.1 million tons.

By contrast, the volume of waste from the extraction and processing of mineral resources rose by 4.5% to 29.5 million tons. The volume of municipal waste – primarily waste from private households – rose slightly by 0.8% to 49.3 million tons; its share of the total volume stands at around 14%.

According to the figures, a total of 296.2 million tons of waste was recovered, a rate of 82%, which has remained unchanged since 2019.

The remaining waste was either dumped in landfill sites (16.3%) or burnt (0.8%). Some 1.2% was disposed of through "other treatment."

The school abuse scandals that have triggered France to weigh new law

Issued on: 01/06/2026 - 15:55



French lawmakers are set to debate a bill aimed at protecting children and combatting violence in schools. The legislation was drafted in the wake of a parliamentary investigation into the Bétharram abuse scandal, which exposed decades of mistreatment at a Catholic-run school in southwestern France. It also comes at the same time as Paris investigators probe allegations non-teaching staff recruited by the city mistreated or abused children at dozens of shcools across the capital.


 













  


Lenient ruling in UK rape case sparks nationwide outcry

Issued on: 29/05/2026 - FRANCE24


12:35 min From the show


A UK judge's decision in late May to spare three teenage boys convicted of raping two girls from prison sentences has sparked outrage. The UK attorney general has referred the judgment to the Court of Appeal. Also studies reveal that nearly two-thirds of women over 50 are struggling with their mental health and not getting the professional help they so badly need. Annette Young talks to Professor Pooja Saini, a British mental health specialist, as to why this is happening. Plus we meet Lhakpa Sherpa from Nepal who's broken the women's record for scaling the world's highest peak, making her eleventh trip to the summit of Mount Everest in 26 years.




Iran war drives India’s cockroaches out, but can Modi crush them?

LONG READ


When an Indian student at a US university used AI to create the “Cockroach Janta Party (CPJ)”, a parody political party, it sparked a viral sensation, hitting the zeitgeist in a country that has been particularly affected by the Iran war. As India's youth circumvent bans to express their economic discontent online, it could pose a threat to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government.


Issued on: 28/05/2026 
FRANCE24
By: Leela JACINTO
Video by: Vedika BAHL
An AI-generated illustration shows the parody Cockroach Janta Party’s logo. © AI-generated image/ Cockroach Janta Party
05:46


Barely three weeks after he launched a parody political movement that took India by storm, Abhijeet Dipke is being hunted and hounded by trolls, facing online extermination by the government, and his AI-generated satirical mascot, the cockroach, is as reviled in ruling party circles as the real thing is in kitchens across the country.

The movement was sparked by Indian Chief Justice Surya Kant’s controversial statements comparing the country’s unemployed youth to cockroaches. “Disheartened by those comments, I made a tweet on X that, what if all cockroaches come together? And on that personal X post, I received tremendous traction,” explained Dipke, an Indian political communications strategist and student at Boston University, in an interview with FRANCE 24.

SPOTLIGHT © FRANCE 24
13:28


Soon, a spoof party, the "Cockroach Janta Party (CJP)", or the People’s Party of Cockroaches, was born online. The name, a parody of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), was digested immediately – and gleefully – by netizen critics of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s policies.

The satirical party hit the zeitgeist in a country that has been particularly impacted by the fallout of the Iran war. The Middle East conflict has also put a spotlight on Modi’s policies, exposing India’s vulnerabilities, highlighting New Delhi’s lack of clout on the diplomatic stage, and increasing the squeeze on significant sections of the population that have been overlooked in the Hindu nationalist government’s “economic miracle” discourse that has dominated India’s political stage for over a decade.

As millions flocked to the cockroach satirical cause, the movement’s social media accounts broke records, gained national and international media attention and even saw demonstrators don cockroach masks and display the parasite mascot at street protests.

It wasn’t long before the cockroach social media accounts came under attack, with Dipke alleging hacking and threats to his family. “I have been getting death threats for the last three days. Now, even my family is getting death threats,” said the 30-year-old native of the western Indian state of Maharashtra who is currently enrolled in a Master’s programme in the US. As digital rights groups condemned the violation of free speech, Dipke claimed there was a “full-blown attack against us to suppress this movement”.



Since Modi came to power in 2014, India has been slipping down press freedom indexes, with NGOs such as Reporters Without Borders warning that the Indian media “has fallen into an unofficial state of emergency”. But with the latest crackdown generating new waves of media coverage, the lid on the discourse of discontent has been prised open, and the scuttling cockroaches may be hard to contain.
Rising youth unemployment, falling US university admissions

While Kant has clarified that his observations from the bench slamming “youngsters like cockroaches” were misquoted and directed only at people obtaining "fake or bogus degrees”, his explanation failed to contain the uproar primarily because his remarks touched wounds that have been festering for years. But they have been suppressed by India’s political elites, according to analysts.

“There's been a lot of anger among the youth the world over,” noted Sushant Singh, a lecturer in South Asian studies at Yale University. “But I think fundamentally the trigger was the safety valves of the Indian state – which is the Supreme Court and the parliament and the Indian media – are no longer acting as safety valves or speaking when the executive overreaches. They're not providing the kind of correction that they're supposed to provide, which is where the frustration is building up in a certain sense among the youth.”

India has the world’s largest youth population, with about 65% of the 1.4 billion population under the age of 35, making youth unemployment a major issue for policymakers. Joblessness among India's urban youth stands at 14%, which is far higher than the overall unemployment of about 5%, official data ⁠show. That figure soars among graduates, with nearly 40% among those below 25 years unemployed, according to the 2026 State of Working India Report by the Azim Premji University.

The world’s most populous nation produces around 8 million graduate students a year, a hefty figure for the job market to accommodate. India also accounts for the largest percentage of foreign students in US universities, which in turn has supplied the US economy with a highly skilled workforce and an aspirational goal for students and their families back home.

But the American Dream in India is fading fast in President Donald Trump’s second term.

The Trump administration’s student visa restrictions, increased visa revocations often linked to minor infractions such as speeding tickets, and an atmosphere of intimidation – including threats to deport international students over pro-Palestinian speech – have seen foreign admissions in US universities fall by 17% in the 2025 fall semester, according to the Institute of International Education. In India, that figure plummeted to 75%, according to Indian media reports, with around 8,000 student visas revoked before December 2025.

From India to US detention: Trump's campus crackdown sends warning to foreign students

“The kind of people who go and study in the US, or who work in the US, are mostly Mr. Modi's staunch supporters because they come from the kind of socio-economic background which staunchly supports Mr. Modi,” explained Singh. “For them, being hurt [by Trump’s immigration policies], and Mr. Modi not being able to prevent the damage to them, is going to in some way damage Mr. Modi.”
A bromance sputters, then dies

While the Trump administration’s policies have sparked alarm in several world capitals, in India, it has heightened the scrutiny on Modi’s foreign policy and its rupture from New Delhi’s historic non-aligned position.

The Hindu nationalist prime minister made a splashy display of his tilt to the US during Trump’s first term, including a massive 2019 “Howdy Modi” rally in Houston, where, the New York Times noted, Modi “broke with protocol to campaign for a second term” for Trump.


President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the "Howdy Modi" event in Houston, September 22, 2019. © Evan Vucci, AP


But when Trump returned to the White House, he killed the bromance with a whopping 50% tariff announcement on Indian goods last year. The US president then topped it with his persistent claims of personally engineering an end to a brief cross-border war between India and Pakistan, the latest conflict between the two nuclear armed states over the disputed Kashmir region.

It was a win for Pakistan since it has long sought international mediation to resolve the Kashmir crisis, while India maintains it is a strictly bilateral issue. Islamabad repaid Trump by nominating him for a Nobel Peace Prize. Modi, meanwhile, bristled amid persistent news reports of the Indian prime minister avoiding a phone call with the US president, which were denied by both sides.

Iran war makes India ‘irrelevant’

The Iran War has heightened the perception of New Delhi’s sidelining on the diplomatic stage, as Islamabad emerged as a key mediator, with Trump dubbing Pakistan’s powerful military chief General Asim Munir his "favourite field marshal".

China, India’s biggest Asian rival and more threatening neighbour, has also welcomed Pakistan’s efforts to negotiate and renew a shaky ceasefire.

China and Pakistan are historical allies, while India has been viewed in Western capitals as a strategic partner to contain Chinese expansionism in the Indo-Pacific. But the Iran war has rattled the pieces on the Asian geostrategic chessboard, with New Delhi noting Trump’s high-profile state visit this month to China, where the US president proclaimed he held “very successful talks” with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping.

Earlier this week, Xi hosted Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and praised his guest’s “positive efforts” to bring peace to the Middle East. India, meanwhile, hosted US Secretary of State Marco Rubio for a visit that was widely viewed as a bid to defuse tensions between the world’s most populous democracies.

At the end of Rubio’s visit, most South Asia analysts concluded that the outcome of the visit was edifying, but not substantive. “There's been a little bit of optics. But I think the real issue is what concretely has been achieved that is in India's favour or which shows that the Trump administration is thinking differently about India. And we haven't seen progress on that,” explained Singh.

The Modi administration’s failure to condemn the US-Israeli strikes on Iran, a historic Indian ally, while forging close ties with Israel has also depleted India’s standing in the Global South and among the BRICS grouping, analysts say.

“India is just missing from the whole geopolitical debate in West Asia or the Middle East. And it’s not that India is just absent. Being absent is fine, but India's absence is not even being noticed. Which means that India is irrelevant,” Singh noted.
A Gen Z – and cockroach – threat

The absence on the diplomatic front is heightened by the serious strains the Iran war has placed on the Indian economy.

The South Asian giant is heavily dependent on fuel imports from the Middle East, and the soaring cost of gasoline, diesel and cooking fuel has put a dent in the Indian rupee, with the currency slumping to a record low last week against the dollar.

“In terms of the shock this has had, not just on energy, but now the ramifications, which are coming on all sorts of fronts, including gold imports, the diamond and all sorts of different industries, that’s not really a good position for India,” said Sandeep Bhardwaj, a research fellow at the National University of Singapore’s Institute of South Asian Studies (ISAS).

The cockroach movement, Bhardwaj notes, is “basically coming out of a lot of this economic anxiety, which is coming out of the persistent job crisis, which has been exacerbated by the economic crisis right now,” he said. “There is a real threat of that economic pressure snowballing into something real in terms of a political cost for the government.”

The political cost of downplaying youth discontent has been keenly felt in India’s neighbourhood in recent years. Gen Z protests have unseated governments in Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bangladesh, leading some to question if India could witness a similar experience.

But Bhardwaj is cautious about predicting a Gen Z replay in the world’s most populous nation. “India is so big. There are so many variations. For a non-political party, led a grassroots movement like this to engulf India, it's going to take a very long time and a lot of things to happen for it to become a major crisis in Indian politics,” he noted.

For the founder of the "Cockroach Janta Party", the meteoric rise of his online protest has led him to question how to take the momentum forward, but he’s taking his time. “None of this was intended. It was born out of satire,” said Dipke carefully. “I think the biggest mistake that all political parties in India have made is that they have stopped engaging with the youth. They no longer have a dialogue. They no longer listen to them. So that's what we are going to do,” he explained. “After getting those ideas and the data from them, that is when we will decide our next course of action.”

Dipke may not be sure of the next course of action for his viral movement, but he’s certain he will not abandon his resilient parasite mascot. “Of course, cockroach is going to be the name of this movement going forward because people are loving it, especially the youth and the Gen Z,” he said. “What was thrown at them as an insult, they are now carrying this name with pride. So, we are going to continue with the cockroach name.”


'Animal medicine': Therapy donkeys help patients at French psychiatric hospital

Patients staying in a psychiatric hospital near Paris have been singing the praises of a novel treatment: spending time with therapy donkeys. Experts and patients say caring for the animals, which are known for their calm and social nature, helps improve emotional regulation, communication, social interaction and self-esteem.


Issued on: 01/06/2026 -
By: FRANCE 24

A patient with mental health conditions participates in a therapy session involving donkeys at a psychiatric hospital in Neuilly-sur-Marne, in the eastern suburbs of Paris, on May 29, 2026. © Thomas Padilla, AP

Therapy donkeys are helping patients with mental health conditions recover in a psychiatric hospital unit outside Paris that's unique to France.

The 19th century farm buildings and wooded surroundings are a haven within the Ville-Evrard hospital complex in Neuilly-sur-Marne. On Friday, patients took the five donkeys for a walk and cared for them. Some confidently lifted their hooves to remove dirt. Many ended the session with a hug.

“When you take medication that helps you relax … it’s exactly the same,” said Nathalie, a 60-year-old patient. She and others were identified by their first names only to protect their privacy.

“I’d call it animal medicine,” she said. “It brings relief. You stop thinking about everything else."


Patients attend the sessions free of charge as part of their treatment, which is funded by France’s public health system.

Participants are usually paired with a donkey – Nono, Pitou, Oscar, Manolo or Malraux. Over time, they become familiar with each other’s personalities.

Audrey Seffar, a nurse at the animal therapy unit, said Nathalie's progress after only a few sessions was significant.

“At first, she wouldn’t get out of the cart (provided for people with physical difficulties). But little by little, with encouragement, she did," Seffar said. "The animal serves as a mediator. It’s such an extraordinary one that today she was able to leave the cart and stand beside her donkey."


Patients with mental health conditions, staff members and volunteers, participate in a therapy session involving donkeys in Neuilly-sur-Marne on May 29, 2026. © Thomas Padilla, AP


Another patient, Jérôme, 52, said the programme helps reduce loneliness.

“Talking with people, taking part in activities I wouldn’t normally do, it helps me in my daily life,” he said.

He added: “It helps you break away from the routine of treatment and medication. Staying at home isn’t good for me.”

The first donkeys arrived at Ville-Evrard hospital in 2016 as part of a project launched by Ermelinda and François Hadey.


Ermelinda, a nurse specializing in psychiatry, strongly believed in animal therapy benefits and thought donkeys, known for their calm and social nature, would be perfect. Her husband learned how to train donkeys for therapy work. Some of the animals were adopted through shelters after experiencing neglect or mistreatment.

“A donkey is very intelligent. It understands things very quickly, but you have to explain slowly,” François Hadey said. “Donkeys are calm, serene animals that are generally close to people. Once they’re involved in these interactions, they connect very well with patients. They’re emotional sponges.”

A patient with mental health conditions cleans a donkey's eyes during the animal therapy session in the eastern suburbs of Paris, on May 29, 2026. © Thomas Padilla, AP


Since 2022, the animal therapy programme has had official status as a health care unit in the hospital, allowing it to employ three full-time nurses. Volunteers with a nonprofit group help care for the animals.

The programme has expanded to include guinea pigs, chickens, doves, goats, turtles and rabbits. Sessions are tailored to people’s needs and preferences, and smaller animals can be brought to hospital rooms.

Alicia Fabi, an 18-year-old nursing student, said the activity gives patients a chance to leave the hospital environment.

“Every time we come back from the activity, they say they feel good, calm and relaxed, and that they enjoyed the outing. That’s really positive,” she said.

Walking together also allows patients and health workers to develop a deeper relationship.

“We talk about many different things, their illness, their lives and just about everything else. We don’t focus only on the illness because we don’t want them dwelling on it all the time,” Fabi said.

Health workers say the sessions are designed as therapeutic interventions for living with anxiety, depression, autism, schizophrenia or other conditions. Staff said they can help improve emotional regulation, communication, social interaction and self-esteem.

“Everything we do with the animals allows us to work with the patient,” Ermelinda Hadey said. “We work on feeding the animal, which helps us address the patient’s own eating habits. We work on the animal’s hygiene, and by mirror effect, we work on the patient’s hygiene as well.”

Patients with mental health conditions participate in a therapy session involving donkeys in Neuilly-sur-Marne. © Thomas Padilla, AP

Many patients take intensive treatments, including antipsychotic medications or sedatives, which can make it difficult to find the motivation to participate in activities, she said. That’s where the relationship to donkeys and other animals play a role, she stressed.

“It does not replace a doctor or a medical prescription, but it can help patients regain confidence and a sense of self-worth," Hadey said.

She said more scientific evaluation is needed. They would like animal therapy to be formally recognised by the psychiatric community as a complementary form of care.

“To do that, we need research. We have plenty of accounts from patients ... Caregivers who accompany them see the benefits every day as well. But doctors have so many other responsibilities that they don’t necessarily witness it firsthand,” she said.

At the end of Friday’s session, as patients chatted, a nurse summed up the program’s appeal: “Donkeys are my best colleagues.”

(FRANCE 24 with AP)