First, check yourself into an insane asylum; chimps are about the worst pets in the whole world (in fact most primates are; ask anyone who has worked with them). A chimp is essentially a much stronger, not-toilet trained, even more tempermental teenager that could attack its owner at any time. Even trained individuals will get attacked and sometimes disfigured/killed (chimp males' first target is usally the scrotum---they rip off other chimps' scrotums in fights and captive chimps have ripped off human males' scrotums as well).
If you still want a chimp, you will have to either get it illegally (they are an endangered CITES animal, so regardless of where you live, in any country on earth it is illegal to own one and usually comes with stiff fines and some jail depending on the country) OR you will have to go through lots of training etc and obtain lots of money to build a facility where they will let you have one. The training depends on what you want to do with it; you could get a PhD and get hired by a primate research facility or get the millions of $ it costs to build one with grants, you could get other higher degrees to work in chimp rescues, etc.
Once you get the chimp, you'll want to have a special location for it or at least make it wear diapers, since you can't toilet train them (it makes sense---they live up in the canopy so their poo never bothers them so they never learned not to foul their own den like dogs and such). You'll need to get monkey chow and supplemental food, especially fruits (but be careful about which ones; some can harm monkeys and apes). And then you'll want to pray that everything works out ok.
You can buy them from zoo's or rehabilitation programs. However, chimpanzees are illegal to own unless you have a exotic wildlife handler's permit. These can only be obtained if you are approved through a zoo, a wildlife program, a rehabilitation or government program or another official group of people who are are well informed and responsible towards the treatment of wild animals. Many people will buy pet chimpanzees as babies thinking they are cute, but once the chimp hits puberty it can become very dangerous. Chimps are extremely strong, excitable, hard to calm, and have very large, sharp teeth. Many chimp owners have lost fingers (and more) from uncontrollable "pet" chimps. Remember, even though they are raised out of the wild, they are ALWAYS still wild animals and will always behave like one.
Chimpanzees are exotic, wild animals that should not be held in captivity. Keeping a chimpanzee (or any primate) as a pet can have serious consequences, just ask Charla Nash!
Yes you can buy chimpanzees however, chimpanzees are not an ideal animal to be raised as a pet. They are unpredictable and stronger than any human and there have been well documented incidents involving these animals not only attacking but severely hurting their owners or visitors.
Your local pet shop should be able to tell you about local laws regarding the care and feeding of a chimpanzee in your area.
Dame Jane Morris Goodall, DBE (the world's foremost expert on chimpanzees) does not recommend keeping a chimpanzee as a pet. By the age of 5 years, they are stronger than most human adults. Chimpanzees can, and will, bite. Chimpanzee owners have lost fingers and suffered severe facial damage.
Chimpanzees are mammals. Because of that, they have a backbone. Therefore, Chimpanzees are vertebrates.
what is an an environment of an chimpanzees
Chimpanzees.
Chimpanzees use external fertilization
Yes, chimpanzees are intelligent
Chimpanzees are in class Mammalia (mammals).
It does not affect chimpanzees at all
Chimpanzees rely mainly on fruits
Chimpanzees are diurnal; they sleep at night.
chimpanzees eat berries and plants
Chimpanzees fall into the class Mammalia.
how do chimpanzees react when they are happy