Why are donkeys facing their 'biggest ever crisis'?

NamStay

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Namibia next on China's list.


The world's donkeys are facing a population crisis because of the huge demand for their skins in China, where they are used to make health foods and traditional medicine.


Donkey meat is also a popular food, but a huge drop in the number of Chinese donkeys and the fact they are slow to reproduce, has forced suppliers to look elsewhere.

Africa has been badly hit because the animals are such an important part of life for transport and farming - particularly in poorer communities.

In many places the price of a donkey has doubled in the past few years, and as thieves cash in, families are left unable to afford a new animal.

'I woke up and my donkey was gone'

Water deliveryman Anthony Maupe Wanyama, 29, from Kenya had his donkey Carlos for four years and was doing well.

"I bought land up-country, bought a house, paid school fees and looked after my family," said the father of two.

He and his donkey were such a part of life in Ongata Rongai, just outside Nairobi, that Anthony's nickname is "Carlos".

"I woke up one morning and Carlos was missing. I looked around the area, and then found him dead, his skin had been removed," said Anthony, tears rolling down his cheeks as he talked about his much-loved animal.

He now rents another donkey to pull a cart-load of blue plastic jerry cans he uses to deliver water, but has to give the owner half of the three or four dollars he makes on a good day.

"Now I don't have enough money. I haven't paid my rent, I haven't paid school fees, and I have people who depend on me," Anthony said.

He can't afford to buy a new Carlos.

Donkey trade - the facts:
  • 1.8m skins are traded every year - according to estimates from UK-based charity The Donkey Sanctuary - but the demand is as high as 10m
  • China's donkey population dropped from 11m in 1990 to 3m today, based on government data
  • Ejiao, the gelatine produced by boiling donkey skins, can sell for up to $388 (£300) per kilo
  • Uganda, Tanzania, Botswana, Niger, Burkina Faso, Mali, and Senegal have banned donkey exports to China
Suffering
The surge in price and demand in Kenya has been encouraged by three donkey abattoirs, which have opened across the country.

They can each slaughter around 150 animals a day, packing and freezing the meat and salting the skins for export.

At the Star Brilliant Donkey Export Abattoir in Naivasha, the latest arrivals are being dragged onto flat metal scales - they are sold by "live weight".
They are shot in the head with a bolt gun before their meat and skins are processed.

Chief executive John Kariuki says he was the first in Kenya, and in Africa, to get official permits to open a donkey slaughterhouse.

"Before, there was no market for the donkeys. People used to sell their cows, people used to sell their goats to pay their school fees for the children," he said.

"But now I find that people in the market are selling donkeys more than cows.

"We are happy with the Chinese, because before there was nothing coming from donkeys, but so many people are benefitting from the donkey now today."

Chinese buyers monitor the process - making sure everything is properly packed and prepared.

When the skins are boiled, they produce a brown gelatine, which is the essential ingredient in Chinese "ejiao" products - popular health foods and traditional medicines.
But the way donkeys are being treated has been criticised.

A British donkey charity and environmental investigative journalists from South Africa-based group Oxpeckers have uncovered cases of animal abuse among those waiting to be killed in appalling conditions.

"This is the biggest crisis donkeys have ever faced," said Mike Baker from The Donkey Sanctuary, which is leading an international campaign to halt the trade in donkey products until it can be properly regulated.

"We are seeing millions being taken and we are seeing suffering on the scale I have never witnessed before.

"We are talking about donkeys being starved to death to make it easier to skin them, or bludgeoned to death."

But Mr Baker says the international pressure is starting to have an impact.

Countries including Uganda, Tanzania, Botswana, Niger, Burkina Faso, Mali, and Senegal have banned China from buying their donkey products.

"Over a dozen governments have now taken action to stop this trade, and that's because they know this is impoverishing their people as well as being massively cruel to animals," Mr Baker says.

They are being killed on a dramatic scale across the continent - and places further afield like Brazil and Peru.

And life is certainly a lot harder for Anthony Wanyama and his family, with rent arrears and unpaid school fees.

Many thousands of people trapped by terrible drought have been forced to sell their only assets, while others have lost their donkeys to thieves and can no longer afford to buy another animal.


Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-41524710
 
Namibia is rapidly becoming a Chinese playground.
Getting through immigration a couple of weeks ago I estimated that of the hundreds of people waiting to get through, I would say it was a 60/40 split between the Chinese and everyone else respectively.
 
Namibia is rapidly becoming a Chinese playground.
Getting through immigration a couple of weeks ago I estimated that of the hundreds of people waiting to get through, I would say it was a 60/40 split between the Chinese and everyone else respectively.

And on track to destroy the African continent and possibly the entire planet.
 
The Chinese seem to be behind every issue for animals!
 
The Chinese seem to be behind every issue for animals!
Amongst other countries, they are currently vacuuming Mozambique of most of it's natural, irreplaceable resources. It's sad.
 
Sad situation.
 
Wow, that is sad! Glad there are countries that are stepping up to the Chinese. Good on them.
 
I don’t want to insult anyone, but when I once asked a Zimbabwean why there was such a huge Chinese presence in the country, he said: “The Chinese give us money. The Americans give us lectures.”

Which would you take?
 
I don’t want to insult anyone, but when I once asked a Zimbabwean why there was such a huge Chinese presence in the country, he said: “The Chinese give us money. The Americans give us lectures.”

Which would you take?
That is total bullshit. $100 MILLION in '15 and '16 total. The U.S. and other WHITE RULED countries have been pouring money down this rathole for decades with no end in sight. The irony of it all is that the U.S. is borrowing the money to fund these losers. A hundred years from now when we collapse from our debt, we'll go down in history as the most delusional society to ever live, spending ourselves in to oblivion with the hope of trying to save the world from itself.
Sheer freaking insanity in my book.

https://www.usaid.gov/zimbabwe/pres...-provides-additional-545-million-humanitarian
 

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That is total bullshit. $100 MILLION in '15 and '16 total. The U.S. and other WHITE RULED countries have been pouring money down this rathole for decades with no end in sight. The irony of it all is that the U.S. is borrowing the money to fund these losers. A hundred years from now when we collapse from our debt, we'll go down in history as the most delusional society to ever live, spending ourselves in to oblivion with the hope of trying to save the world from itself.
Sheer freaking insanity in my book.

https://www.usaid.gov/zimbabwe/pres...-provides-additional-545-million-humanitarian
First, I said I didn’t want to insult anyone. Second, I said that’s what a Zimbabwean said, I didn’t pass judgment on it.

Yes, we have thrown money into Africa and continue to do so. But it does come, it seems, with more strings than Chinese money. Can you imagine China giving Zim a lecture on, say, corruption, or democracy or human rights? Didn’t think so.
 
First, I said I didn’t want to insult anyone. Second, I said that’s what a Zimbabwean said, I didn’t pass judgment on it.

Yes, we have thrown money into Africa and continue to do so. But it does come, it seems, with more strings than Chinese money. Can you imagine China giving Zim a lecture on, say, corruption, or democracy or human rights? Didn’t think so.
Not taken as an insult from you personally but those words ARE an insult to the U.S. taxpayer, the words of an ingrate, not unlike the dregs of society in the U.S. that think the money you worked for should be shared with them. If it were up to me, NONE of these countries would get a nickel from the U.S. taxpayer. Their memories are no longer than their peckers when it comes to handouts and they would be much better off if they learned to stand on their own two feet.

From the same link if one doesn't read it:

For more than 30 years, the American people, through USAID, have contributed over $2.6 billion in assistance to Zimbabwe. Current projects include initiatives to increase food security, support economic resilience, improve health systems and services, and promote a more democratic system of governance.
 
I don’t want to insult anyone, but when I once asked a Zimbabwean why there was such a huge Chinese presence in the country, he said: “The Chinese give us money. The Americans give us lectures.”

Which would you take?

No insult sir. My response is simply that we have put more money into the continent than we need to or should.
The Chinese are paying to rebuild the Kariba Dam, so I have read, because the US and the World Bank refused anymore loans. The fourth largest dam in the world is in danger of failing due to neglect. Money sent to that country ends up being wasted and stolen.
We don't need to lecture them but I guess NO MONEY is a lecture to them!
 
Australia has feral donkeys galore on a grand scale,they are a pest species to be shot on sight,time to let the chinese have their way with them

A agree but would like to process here in Australia to minimize the stress placed on the donkeys.
 
First, I said I didn’t want to insult anyone. Second, I said that’s what a Zimbabwean said, I didn’t pass judgment on it.

Yes, we have thrown money into Africa and continue to do so. But it does come, it seems, with more strings than Chinese money. Can you imagine China giving Zim a lecture on, say, corruption, or democracy or human rights? Didn’t think so.

Well I mean anytime someone or a country gives another country money it usually comes with strings attached. Few things are ever truly "free".

On the other hand it might be worthwhile to look at how much $ total both countries put into Zim. and also the percentage of that money that comes in the form of "foreign aid" vs. investments. Going a bit off topic but foreign aid or those charity organizations that go in and build "free" stuff in Africa are kind of a bad idea. Because it creates a tragedy of the commons. Say you have some well meaning organization that goes into a Zimbabwean village and gives them a generator, digs a well, builds pumps etc... all for free. And then within a few years its all falling apart because it was free, no one owns it or cares about it and people figure when it breaks they'll just be given another one- no skin off their backs. Now if you invest in a business venture and provide jobs etc... then people can buy their own stuff and have an appreciation for it. Plus there is mutual benefit. I guess the old saying "give a man a fish and you feed him for a day and teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime" applies here...
 
We don't have any money donkeys here in New Zealand .
But and i mean but we have a friggen lot of dairy farms .
Guess what ?
The Chinesse are buying them flat out and even building there own milk powder factories .
All with our bloody governments blessing !!!
Selling our bloody country to the chinese to make the books look good .
Walked down a main street in our capital city the other day and all the friggen shop signs were in chinesse and most people in the street were asian !
Its not only happening in Africa .
Sorry if im raving a bit but I get a bit hot under the collar with it .
 
wonder how long it would take the Chinese to eat all of them off the planet if they could be convinced Chinese was the new wonder food,drug,medicine?
 
I too noticed the Chinese presence in both Namibia and New Zealand.
 
Petrusville, South Africa in the Karoo is pretty much in the middle of nowhere. Chinese bought, own and operate a liquor store and a grocery store. The backs of the establishments along the alley are literally trash dumps. They're like a virus on the African continent.
 

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