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You're presenting evidence against the point you seem to be trying to make. Of course the rafting can go both ways, and across any oceans. While mammals being washed out to sea and clinging to some kind of flotsam would be common, voyaging from one continent to another would be fairly rare. This is because it requires a combination of circumstances, each individual one being common or likely, but getting them all together statistically rare, but arguably almost inevitable at some time given the time scale.
I think there is a better case for rodents than monkeys.
What time window do you propose?
Why is a parallel evolution of monkeys from creatures of similar origin so unacceptable in two different locations?
This is one of the issues I have against the theory of evolution in it's current form.
If an event can happen once then it can happen again. It should be repeatable. If monkeys can live quite well in both South America and Africa even today, then they should be able to evolve as such from a common ancestor.
You need more evidence to support that this is indeed happening, not just with monkeys but with other species as well including humans.