
From trauma to triumph: First gibbon born in captivity's journey to Malaysian jungle
And now, Nabalu ("Spirit of the mountain") has been revealed publicly, a gibbon believed to be the first in the world to be born in captivity.
Since his birth on May 8 at the Borneo Gibbon Rehabilitation Project (Borneo GReP) site in Kota Belud, Nabalu is like any other newborn.
"He likes to cling on to his mother,' said primatologist Mariani Ramli, who is the founder and president of Gibbon Conservation Society (GCS).
Nabalu's parents are Candyman and Manis, both of whom were rescued several years ago and rehabilitated at Borneo GReP.
In a statement, GCS said the story of Candyman and Manis was one of healing and resilience.
"Before their rehabilitation, they experienced prolonged captivity -- a direct result of poaching and the pet trade that continues to devastate wild gibbon populations."
"Like many others, they were likely taken from the forest as infants after their families were killed -- a common practice in which poachers slaughter adult gibbons to capture a single baby," it said.
Candyman had exhibited severe behaviours such as relentless pacing and rocking for hours, which were signs of trauma from prolonged isolation.
Manis, on the other hand, was tense and fearful.
"Today, Candyman is relaxed, alert and confident, while Manis is affectionate, playful and calm. And now, they are parents to the world's first-ever hylobates funereus (north Bornean gibbon) baby born in rehabilitation,' Mariani said.
She said Nabalu, once he is more than six-months-old, will be released into the wild with his parents.
She said that successful gibbon rewilding requires the fulfilment of all the criteria for release based on International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) guidelines.
These include brachiation (natural swinging from branch to branch), minimal time on the ground (less than 5 percent of the time, more than 40 percent in the upper canopy), proper socialization (at least 3 percent of time grooming and bonding with others), and paired with a child (from a successful mating and co-parenting of offspring), she said.
According to GCS, the birth of Nabalu is significant given that his species is listed as endangered by the IUCN.
"Nabalu not only reflects the sacredness and strength of Mount Kinabalu, and embodies resilience, as well as hope for the future of Borneo's biodiversity and wildlife, but also underscores the urgency of protecting what remains of their native habitat.'
Sabah Tourism, Culture and Environment Minister Datuk Seri Christina Liew said the ministry, through the Sabah Wildlife Department, will support gibbon conservation and rehabilitation.
Liew congratulated Mariani who has earned international recognition for her gibbon conservation and rehabilitation work in Malaysia under the auspices of GCS.
For instance, Mariani was twice named World Female Ranger Ambassador for Resilience -- in 2024 and 2025 -- and the only Malaysian at that.
"With your passion and relentless effort, you have made Sabah and Malaysia proud of your leadership in gibbon conservation through your society,' Liew said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Invasion Season 3 Gets August Release Date — Watch First Trailer
Some 17 months after being renewed for Season 3, Apple TV+'s Invasion now has a return date. Season 3 of the sci-fi drama — which dropped its Season 2 finale back in October 2023 — will premiere Friday, Aug. 22 with a singular episode, followed by weekly releases through Oct. 24. More from TVLine The Challenge: Vets and New Threats Trailer Reveals the One Thing TJ Hates More Than Quitters - Watch Save the Dates: Eva Longoria's Wrexham Spinoff, Drop on Peacock and More Jennifer Aniston to Play Jennette McCurdy's Mother in I'm Glad My Mom Died Series Adaptation for Apple TV+ A teaser trailer, seen below, was released along with the awaited premiere date. Created by Simon Kinberg and David Weil, Invasion follows an alien invasion through different perspectives around the world. In Season 3, 'those perspectives collide for the first time, as the series' main characters are brought together to work as a team on a critical mission to infiltrate the alien mothership,' says the official synopsis. 'The ultimate apex aliens have finally emerged, rapidly spreading their deadly tendrils across our planet. It will take all our heroes working together, using all their experience and expertise, to save our species. New relationships are formed, old relationship are challenged and even shattered, as our international cast of characters must become a team before it's too late.' Golshifteh Farahani (as Aneesha), Shioli Kutsuna (Mitsuki), Shamier Anderson (Trevante), India Brown (Jamila), Shane Zaza (Nikhil) and Enver Gjokaj (Clark) all came back for Season 3, while Erika Alexander (Wu-Tang: An American Saga) joined the cast in an undisclosed role. Want scoop on , or for any other TV show? Shoot an email to InsideLine@ and your question may be answered via Matt's Inside Line! Best of TVLine 'Missing' Shows, Found! Get the Latest on Ahsoka, Monarch, P-Valley, Sugar, Anansi Boys and 25+ Others Yellowjackets Mysteries: An Up-to-Date List of the Series' Biggest Questions (and Answers?) The Emmys' Most Memorable Moments: Laughter, Tears, Historical Wins, 'The Big One' and More


Fox News
22 minutes ago
- Fox News
Sean ‘Diddy' Combs Verdict Read In Court
Sean 'Diddy' Combs was found guilty of transporting women for prostitution, but cleared of the most serious racketeering and sex trafficking charges. Suge Knight claims Tupac's ashes were smoked in a blunt by friends and family after his cremation, a tribute he says he didn't join due to probation. New Kids on the Block's Vegas residency kicked off with a surprise cameo from Backstreet Boys members, uniting two iconic boy bands on stage. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit


Boston Globe
22 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
Musk vows to start a third party. Funding's no issue, but there are others.
Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Even some of Musk's own supporters have expressed doubts about the direction he now plans to take, preferring that he stay focused on the business ideas that fueled his net worth of roughly $400 billion. Advertisement But as his improbable bid to buy Twitter and front-and-center role in the 2024 election showed, Musk has defied expectations before. If nothing else, he could make life difficult for lawmakers he says have reneged on their promise to cut spending. Advertisement 'Every member of Congress who campaigned on reducing government spending and then immediately voted for the biggest debt increase in history should hang their head in shame!' Musk wrote on X, the social media platform he bought when it was still named Twitter, this week. 'And they will lose their primary next year if it is the last thing I do on this Earth.' Musk, who didn't respond to a request for comment, has already identified his next target: the reelection campaign of Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Kentucky), who opposes Trump's signature legislative package. Urged to support Massie by former GOP congressman Justin Amash, a Trump foe who declared himself an independent in a 2019 op-ed decrying the two-party system as an 'existential threat,' Musk replied, 'I will.' Representative Thomas Massie speaks to the media following a vote to stop a government shutdown at the Capitol on March 11. Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post Massie did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday about Musk starting a third party, but he posted a Fox News story about the chief executive's plans to donate to his campaign. 'An interesting thing just happened,' Massie wrote on X. With Trump already working to defeat Massie next year, the race in northern Kentucky appears to be the first to pit the two billionaires against each other. On Capitol Hill, where the Senate passed the massive tax and spending bill Tuesday afternoon, there were few signs of alarm about Musk. Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-Oklahoma), when asked by reporters Monday evening about Musk's threats to punish Republicans who vote for Trump's plan, said the billionaire is not top of mind at the Capitol. 'Doesn't matter, doesn't matter at all, no. It's not even been a conversation of ours,' he said. 'I mean, if we ran every time someone said something about our election, we'd live in fear the whole time.' Advertisement Senator Markwayne Mullin bounces a rubber ball through the Ohio Clock Corridor on Monday, on Capitol Hill. Tom Brenner/For The Washington Post Unless that someone is Trump. Two Republican lawmakers who have been at odds with Trump both said in rapid succession this week that they would not seek reelection. Rep. Don Bacon (Nebraska), who has taken issue with Trump's tariffs and policy toward Russia, announced his retirement Monday. The day before, Sen. Thom Tillis (North Carolina) said he would not seek a third term after Trump vowed to punish him for opposing his legislative package. That leaves Massie as one of the only points of Republican resistance in Congress to Trump's agenda. Musk's decision to cast himself as a potential third-party leader raises questions about his political vision. It has just been in the last few years that he has evolved from Democratic-leaning Trump critic to staunchly Republican Trump acolyte. Trump allies mocked his latest incarnation. 'I think it's the ketamine talking in the middle of the night,' said Trump pollster Jim McLaughlin, referring to media reports about Musk's drug use that he has denied. 'Trump is the Republican Party right now. He is the conservative movement. There's not a hankering for a third party with Elon Musk.' A Gallup poll last year found that 58 percent of U.S. adults agree that a third party is needed in the U.S. because the Republican and Democratic parties 'do such a poor job' of representing the American people. Support for a third party has averaged 56 percent since 2003, according to Gallup. History shows that third-party candidates are rarely victorious. Ross Perot, one of the most successful independent candidates for president in American history, received about 19 percent of the popular vote and no electoral college votes. Advertisement 'Third parties are traditionally spoilers or wasted votes,' said Lee Drutman, senior fellow at the New America think tank. 'But if Musk's goal is to cause chaos and make a point and disrupt, it gets a lot easier.' Ralph Nader's presidential bid in 2000 was a classic example of a disruptive campaign, Drutman said, contributing to an outcome so close that Republican George W. Bush prevailed over Democrat Al Gore only after the Supreme Court weighed in. Ralph Nader acknowledges his mother at an event at the National Press Club before watching the election night voting unfold. Lucian Perkins/TWP The trend in the U.S. toward increased political polarization also makes it more difficult for third-party candidates, Drutman said. When Perot ran in 1992, Bill Clinton and George H.W. Bush were both running as centrists, allowing Perot to argue that there wasn't much daylight between the two major parties. By contrast, the differences between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump in the 2024 election were much more stark. America's political diversity also complicates matters, Drutman said. 'If there clearly was a party in the center that was more popular than the Democrats or the Republicans, then someone would have organized it by now,' he said. 'It's not like we've just been waiting for Elon Musk to show up.' Musk entered politics in earnest during the 2024 presidential election. Beyond his massive financial investment, Musk frequently appeared alongside Trump at rallies and cheered him on over X. But since Trump's win, Musk's experience in politics has been turbulent. Earlier this year, the billionaire and groups affiliated with him donated more than $20 million in a bid to help conservatives take control of the Wisconsin Supreme Court. In the final stretch of the campaign, Musk drew derision for wearing a foam cheesehead at a town hall and for directing his America PAC to pay registered voters for signing petitions. A couple of voters won $1 million prizes. Advertisement But even with the race flooded with Musk's cash, the conservative judicial candidate — whom Trump also endorsed — lost by a wide margin in April. Musk's personal presence in the race did his candidate harm, said Barry Burden, director of the University of Wisconsin's Elections Research Center. Conservative voters appreciated Musk's money, but that wasn't enough to overcome negative perceptions of an ultra-wealthy outsider injecting himself into the state's politics, Burden said, adding that Musk's presence galvanized greater liberal turnout. 'A new party is going to benefit most from Musk if they can draw on his resources but keep him in the background,' Burden said. 'And if he can portray himself as an innovator and a tech entrepreneur — and somebody who is really contributing to the American economy and funding this new operation without being its front person — I think that's probably going to lead to the most success.' Musk floated his idea of a new party nearly one month ago on June 5, after days of criticizing the massive GOP tax bill as a measure that would burden the country with 'crushingly unsustainable debt.' 'Is it time to create a new political party in America that actually represents the 80% in the middle?' Musk wrote, along with a poll. Since then, Musk has regularly posted about starting a new party and going after lawmakers who vote for the spending bill. 'If this insane spending bill passes, the America Party will be formed the next day,' Musk wrote Monday. Advertisement A person who has served as a sounding board for Musk, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter, questioned Musk's ultimate strategy in undermining a party he had hoisted to victory beyond wanting 'to be in the driver's seat.' 'I agree our government is broken, but it's a tougher problem to fix than landing a rocket,' the person said. Paul Kane contributed to this report.