Donkeys stolen, skinned in Africa to feed Chinese demand

AP  |  Nairobi 

Dawn was just beginning to break when Kamonjo Kariuki woke to find his donkeys missing. The villager searched the bush frantically for the animals he depends on to deliver water for a living, but they were nowhere to be found.

"I was in shock," said Kariuki, 37, who is known in his Kenyan village of as "Jose wa Mapunda" "of the Donkeys" in Swahili.

Kariuki believes his donkeys were the latest victims of a black market for skins, the key ingredient in a Chinese health fad that's threatening the beasts of burden many Africans rely on for farm work and transporting heavy loads.

From to Burkina Faso, to Nigeria, animal rights groups say, agents are seeking to feed China's insatiable appetite for a gelatin they call ejiao (pronounced "uh-jee-ow"), made from stewed skins that purports to provide health benefits.

Shrinking donkey herds in have driven ejiao producers to seek out donkey skins from Africa, and South America, threatening the world's donkey population and driving violent crime and protests across Africa, the activists say.

Kariuki founded a protest group "Tunza Punda Wako" or "Take Care of Your Donkey" in Swahili. They've picketed the abattoir in Naivasha, accusing it of driving the skin thefts.

"At this rate we will tell our children that donkeys once existed," he said. Fourteen African governments have banned the export of donkey skins, according to the U.K.-based group

In Kenya, the donkey population has fallen in the past nine years by a third from 1.8 million to 1.2 million. Kenya's three 1,000 donkeys a day to supply skins to China, said Calvin Onyango, of the

"We do not have many donkeys and most people do not want to sell their donkeys. So to keep supplying these slaughterhouses, we have ended up with businesspeople or brokers stealing other people's donkeys to supply the slaughterhouses," Onyango said.

Onyango said that the rate at which donkeys were being slaughtered meant that there could be none left in five years.

From Kenya, the donkey hides of kilometers (miles) to Many of them end up in an eastern town called Dong'e, where most of the world's ejiao is made.

On the road into Dong'e, billboard after billboard proclaims the purported curative powers of the gelatin.

"Ejiao, eat for a long life, lose weight, and get more energy," reads a slogan printed on the side of a hotel dedicated to gelatin tourism.

Farmers raise hundreds of donkeys in surrounding the town. Most donkeys at three farms visited were tagged with the initials of the Dong'e Ejiao Corporation Limited, or DEEJ, the nation's largest of donkey gelatin.

The company processes about 1 million skins a year and makes up 63 percent of the ejiao market, according to the Forward Industry Research Institute, a Chinese market research firm. says in its latest annual report that its profits rose 10 percent to $313 million last year.

declined to be interviewed but sent a statement to the AP saying ejiao has benefited more than 20,000 poor households in 1,000 towns.

Qin said the soaring demand for ejiao isn't the reason that donkey populations are shrinking. Rather, fewer donkeys are being bred, he wrote, because they've been increasingly replaced by machines on farms.

Guo Fanli, an in the southern city of Shenzhen, said Qin and have inflated ejiao's value by marketing what was typically used for what was believed to be its blood-boosting properties as something with far wider benefits to body health and beauty.

"By enriching the cultural meaning of ejiao, and overstating its actual effects, the company has successfully made it into a with multiple uses that can be bought as a gift," Guo said.

"The more it has been hyped, the more miserably it could fall," he said. Others have echoed skepticism of ejiao's uses. health agency said ejiao marketing was based on "superstitious concepts." "Donkey hide is just 'boiled donkey skin,'" the commission said in a February statement on the micro-blogging site, The commission took down the post after an uproar among traditional medicine enthusiasts.

One such is Fu Yanlin, a at Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, who says he often prescribes ejiao to the 100 patients he sees a week for urinary, cardiovascular, gynecological and other ailments.

The surge in ejiao demand has driven the price of donkey hides up by nearly five times from $78 per hide in 2010 to $405 in 2015, according to the China's donkey population, meanwhile, has halved from 9.4 million in 1996 to 5.5 million in 2015, according to Chinese state media, driving producers to look abroad.

In response to the surging demand, state-built donkey abattoirs have sprung up in the African nations of Namibia, Tanzania, Kenya, and Niger's hide exports tripled. slaughtered 3 percent of its total donkey population in six months, according the

More than 2 million of the world's 44 million donkeys are killed for their skins every year, according to Donkey Sanctuary.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, June 15 2018. 09:40 IST