Abubakar Ya'u digs sand
from vast, sweeping dunes and loads heavy hessian sacks of the fine, golden
bounty onto the backs of donkeys which carry it to market.
Rampant
demand for the beasts of burden in China, where their skins are believed to
have medicinal properties, has caused prices to soar -- creating a dilemma for
Ya'u and his fellow excavators in Kano, northern Nigeria.
"Two
years ago we were buying donkeys strong enough for our trade for between ₦15,000
and ₦18,000 (between US$42 and US$50) -- but now to get a good donkey you will
require ₦70,000 to ₦75,000," he said, wearing dusty sandals, jeans and a
T-shirt.
"The
reason for this is the huge purchase of donkeys which are transported to the
south where their meat is consumed and their skin exported," he explained.
"To
us, it is a calamity because as a sand digger if you lose your donkey, you can
hardly raise the money to replace it."
Fellow
sand digger Abdurrahman Garba, who has been in the business for 30 years, added
that export bans by some of Nigeria's neighbours had made the situation worse.
- 'Alarming rate' -
"Now
that Niger has banned donkey exports to save its stock, the Chinese have turned
to our stock -- depleting them at an alarming rate," said Garba, 40.
Botswana,
Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso and Gambia all impose restrictions on the trade,
while Zimbabwean authorities blocked a private donkey slaughterhouse under
construction and Ethiopia closed its only functioning abattoir.
Garba
admitted that the temptation to sell the animals for short-term gain could be
overwhelming.
"I
was offered ₦95,000 for my biggest donkey but I fought hard to resist the
temptation to sell it because I knew I will not be able to replace it," he
said. "We blame the Chinese for this disturbing situation."
The
animals are increasingly being transported, sometimes covertly, from Mali,
Niger, Burkina Faso and northern Nigeria to the southeast where they are then
typically slaughtered.
Donkeys
are relatively cheaper in the Muslim-majority north as they are typically not
slaughtered for their meat, tempering demand.
But
the north-south trade route for donkeys was already well established as
consumption has traditionally been relatively high in the south where some
communities have long eaten the animals.
At
a market in Ughelli, Delta State -- the centre of the Nigerian donkey trade --
hundreds of donkeys are crammed into pens under the burning sun as they await
their fate. Some are skeletally thin, all are quiet.
New
animal pens are being made every month as the demand for donkey hides and meat
is met with a steadily growing supply from the north.
From
Delta state on Nigeria's southern coast, hides are shipped to China where they
are stewed to render the coveted gelatin known as "Ejiao" in Chinese.
The
buyers, who believe that soluble Ejiao gum is an effective remedy for troubles
ranging from colds to aging, comprise a market thought to be worth hundreds of
millions of dollars every year.
"The
medicine is popularly referred to as a blood tonic and helps to fortify the
body, particularly in conditions like anaemia," said Oliver Emekpor, a
butcher handling donkey meat at the Ughelli market.
"It
comes in blocks of dried pieces which are melted down into a brew of herbal
mixture to drink and sells for up to US$390 (€330) per kilo."
Nothing
is wasted. To maximize profits, donkey dealers often sell the remaining meat to
unwary consumers as beef, a practice described by a local trade association as
"criminal".
Hooves
are used to make shoes and donkey bones are used to manufacture plates.
- 'Scarcity of donkeys' -
Simon
Pope, a campaigner at the Donkey Sanctuary, a British animal welfare charity,
said that the scale of the donkey trade is almost impossible to estimate.
"Each
donkey hide produces one kilogram of Ejiao and there is a huge uncertainty
about how many hides are being used annually," he said.
Yemi
Adebayo, an official at Nigeria's trade ministry, acknowledged that donkey hide
sales to China are booming, but refused to confirm if any deal had been struck
to facilitate shipments.
"Different
countries either support or oppose the trade in different ways," he said,
but the status of the activity in Nigeria remained unclear.
Dong-E
E-Jiao is China's market leader for the manufacture and sale of Ejiao,
controlling 70% of the market. The firm posted pre-tax profits of US$295
million (€250 million) in 2016 and handled roughly 700,000 donkey hides in 2014
alone.
Donkey
numbers in China have nearly halved from 11 million in the 1990s to six million
in 2013, according to official statistics.
China
produces 5,000 tonnes of Ejiao each year, requiring some four million hides,
according to the China Daily.
"The
strong players will get stronger amid the scarcity of donkeys and decreasing
supply of donkey hide," wrote BOCOM International financial services in a
research note for investors.
The
Donkey Sanctuary's investigation into the trade, "Under the Skin," (DOWNLOAD REPORT) revealed that the explosion in demand had led to a surge in donkey thefts in
Africa, Asia and South America.
"Donkeys may soon go extinct if they continue to be killed," said Garba, the veteran sand digger. "Once they are finished, our trade will suffer."
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