Millions of donkeys killed each year to make medicine - BBC News

The quest to stop the slaughter of working donkeys, as demand grows for a traditional remedy made from their skin.

1 day agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, The Donkey SanctuaryImage caption, A donkey can mean the difference between a modest livelihood and destitution for many people in poor, rural communitiesBy Victoria Gill and Kate StephensScience team, BBC NewsTo sell water and make his living, Steve relied completely on his donkeys. They pulled him in his cart loaded with its 20 jerry cans to all his customers. When Steve's donkeys were stolen for their skins, he could no longer work.

That day started like most others. In the morning, he left his home in the outskirts of Nairobi and went to the field to get his animals.

"I couldn't see them," he recalls. "I searched all day, all night and the following day." It was three days later that he got a call from a friend telling him he had found the animals' skeletons. "They'd been killed, slaughtered, their skin was not there."

Donkey thefts like this have become increasingly common across many parts of Africa - and in other parts of the world that have large populations of these working animals. Steve - and his donkeys - are collateral damage in a controversial global trade in donkey skin.

Image source, The Donkey SanctuaryImage caption, The slaughter and export of donkey skins could be banned across AfricaIts origins are thousands of miles from that field in Kenya. In China, a traditional medicinal remedy that is made with the gelatin in donkey skin is in high demand. It is called Ejiao.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-68230069


Post ID: 6ace752c-6fc8-4a4f-9941-b03c51041461
Rating: 5
Updated: 2 months ago
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