From African Times -
Nairobi - via UK Independent 6th April 2001
Independent website:
Why slaughter all those
animals when you can cure the disease with cold ash and dung?
by Declan Walsh
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For Kenya's Masai herders it
has been a roller-coaster year. A devastating drought turned the vast,
lush plains into scorched dustbowls. Tens of thousands of cattle died,
and the sight of their shrivelled carcasses caused great distress to the
pastoralists, whose reverence for four-legged ruminants borders on the
religious.
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By June it had got so bad that
the spear-wielding herders had driven their animals into down-town Nairobi
in a desperate search for green grass. Public parks were invaded by hordes
of liberally defecating animals while 'cattle-jams' introduced a novel
twist to Nairobi's chronic traffic problem.
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This year, however, it's the
Masai who are laughing. The rains have come, the Rift Valley is bursting
with life, and the adored cattle are growing fat.
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But in the Masai manyata
villages, the word is starting to filter through of utter folly in far
away Europe. Apparently, people say, hundreds of thousands of healthy cattle
are being slaughtered and incinerated in massive beef pyres. And just because
they have foot-and-mouth disease.
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"These are very, very foolish
people," said Loseti Bois with barely concealed disdain at Kiserian slaughterhouse,
20 miles south of Nairobi. The one-eyed herder, standing in the blood of
freshly slaughtered cattle, grimaced as a fellow herder explained the horror
of European disease containment.
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"Don't those people know the
cattle can be cured?" he demanded. "They need a punsihment for killing
them. They should be shot to."
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John Parsoi was also disgusted.
"If I see you burning your cattle I feel bad in the heart," he said solemnly.
"The cow is the closest friend of the Masai."
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Foot-and-mouth has been endemic
in Kenyan cattle herds for as long as anyone can remember. But the discovery
of a fresh outbreak does not see hordes of panicked herders calling in
the men in white suits. Instead, they set about the quiet process of nursing
their animals back to health.
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Herbs are extracted from tree-bark
and plants, then diluted with water and fed to the affected cattle. Foot-and-mouth
sores are treated with cold ash, then sealed with cow dung to prevent flies
spreading the virus. If there is a fast-flowing strwam nearby, the herd
is marched through it.
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And then it is isolated, bush
style, before being taken to the vet for an injection. "We make a sign
at the entrance," explained 75 year old Otopokie Ole Kereya. "Nobody is
allowed to eat or sleep there for two days. Afterwards we take the cow
to the vet."
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The disease is so benignly regarded
that it shares a name with the common cold: oloirobi. and vaccination
is fully embraced by the Masai. A herd of 20 cattle can be treated for
about £8. Even the white man can see sense in the policy.
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There are solid reasons why
Kenyans can afford the occasional foot-and-mouth outbreak. The Kenyan Zebu
cattle are more resistant than their fragile northern cousins, such as
Freisians. Kenya has no export industry to speak of, apart from cross-border
raids by rival tribes, and a slaughter policy would mean herds of migrating
wildebeest and zebra would also have to be culled - not something well-heeled
tourists would appreciate in the Masai Mara.
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But the real difference is cultural.
Cattle are much more than just walking hamburger factories for the Masai.
They are held in the greatest respect as the source of wealth and status.
songs are sung about them, brides are bought with them and, if necessary,
battles are fought over them. God help any government inspector that tried
to take them away. "They would probably get violent," ventured Dr Antony
Masoke of the International Livestock Research Institute in Nairobi. "Thre
Masai believe that all of the cows in the world originally belonged to
them. anyone else who owns one, they say, is just borrowing it for the
time being."
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