Sometimes in life you just need a hug. That was definitely the case for Kailo, a rescued baby chimpanzee when he arrived at the Lwiro Primates Rehabilitation Center in the Democratic Republic of Congo on March 3.

Footage shared by Lwiro Primates on Facebook shows the young chimp running out of his transport box and into his rescuer’s arms.

“He really needed to feel the safety and protection,” Itsaso Vélez del Burgo Guinea, technical director at the Lwiro Primates Rehabilitation Center and the woman in the video, told Newsweek. “Without knowing me, he just jumped on my arm hoping I will take care of him.”

Kailo, who is a year and a half to 2-years-old, was rescued from traffickers after poachers killed his mother.

Baby chimpanzee hugs rescuer

Stills from the footage of Kailo arriving at the Lwiro Primates Rehabilitation Center and running to hug Itsaso Vélez del Burgo Guinea. Lwiro Primates / @lwiro_primates/Facebook

“In order to get a baby primate, poachers need to kill their mothers, as they will protect their babies to the death,” Lwiro Primates said in the Facebook post.