logo
A free clinic for donkeys, vital to Ethiopia's economy

A free clinic for donkeys, vital to Ethiopia's economy

eNCA20-05-2025
ADDIS ABABA - At a clinic in Ethiopia's capital, a donkey is complaining as a vet tries to trim his nails.
Ethiopia is thought to have the most donkeys in the world, one in five of the global total according to the United Nations, and they form a vital part of the economy.
So the Donkey Sanctuary, run by a British charity that operates around the world, has its work cut out at its free clinic near Merkato, Addis Ababa's vast open-air market.
On a recent visit by AFP, several dozen donkeys were gathered in pens, some agitated and kicking their feet, while others eagerly pounced on food.
Caregivers and veterinarians were taking turns treating injuries, colic and eye problems.
Guluma Bayi, 38, walked more than an hour and a half with his two donkeys to reach the clinic.
"It has been three weeks since my donkeys became sick," he told AFP. "One has a leg problem and the other has a stomach issue."
Like the others making the trip, Guluma relies heavily on his donkeys to make a living. He uses them to transport jerrycans of water to sell to his fellow villagers.
"After they became ill, I couldn't buy bread for my children," he said. "I begged a guy to bring me here."
After successful treatment, Guluma was able to go home with both donkeys.
The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation says Ethiopia had some nine million donkeys as of 2018.
AFP | Amanuel Sileshi
They play a major economic role in the East African country of around 130 million people, ploughing fields and transporting goods, offering a cheaper alternative to vehicles at a time when petrol prices have risen sharply.
"There is a proverb in Ethiopia: if you don't have a donkey, you are a donkey yourself," said Tesfaye Megra, project coordinator for the Donkey Sanctuary, laughing.
The charity operates in several regions across the country and opened its Addis Ababa centre in 2007.
"They are invaluable animals... and they are suffering while they are providing different services to the community," said Tesfaye.
The daily life of donkeys is no picnic.
Urban sprawl in the Ethiopian capital has made green spaces increasingly scarce.
The loads they carry can be heavy, and many are beaten and badly treated.
Another visitor to the clinic, Chane Baye, said he used his two donkeys to carry sacks filled with grain for clients across the city.
They allow him to earn between 200 and 400 birr per day (around $1.50 to $3) -- not bad in a country where a third of the population lives below the World Bank's poverty line of $2.15 per day.
The 61-year-old comes roughly every three months to have his donkeys checked -- "whenever they start limping or have a stomach problem," he said.
"Before this clinic, we used traditional ways to treat them," he added, referring in particular to nails roughly removed from the animals' legs with a knife.
He is pleased his donkeys now get professional treatment for wounds and infections.
Derege Tsegay, a vet at the sanctuary, performs a routine but unsavoury operation, inserting his gloved-up arm deep into a struggling donkey's rectum.
AFP | Amanuel Sileshi
Derege pulls out the large chunk of feces that had accumulated in the animal's stomach.
"It happens often," he said.
A shortage of food in the city means donkeys eat whatever they find, often including plastic which can block their digestive system.
It's not always pleasant, but he knows how important the work can be for local people.
"I am proud of what I am doing... because I am trying to solve the problem of so many owners that rely on their donkeys," he said with a smile.
By Dylan Gamba
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Humanity in dire need in Gaza, Sudan, Syria, Ukraine, Haiti
Humanity in dire need in Gaza, Sudan, Syria, Ukraine, Haiti

Mail & Guardian

time16 hours ago

  • Mail & Guardian

Humanity in dire need in Gaza, Sudan, Syria, Ukraine, Haiti

About 400 million children (one in five) live in or are fleeing war. Photo: File On 19 August 2003, a bomb attack on the Canal Hotel in Baghdad, Iraq, killed 22 humanitarian aid workers, including a United Nations special representative of the secretary general for Iraq. Five years later, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution designating 19 August as Since then, this day has become the annual flagship of the Currently, more than 300 million people globally require humanitarian assistance and protection, and Halfway through 2025, We now turn to a few countries recently highlighted by the OCHA where humanitarian workers are doing their utmost best — sometimes under very difficult circumstances — to alleviate the suffering of those affected. The dire situation in these countries underscores the need for ongoing humanitarian efforts. Gaza We hear daily from several news platforms about the many people being killed and injured in the Gaza Strip, including people searching for food along UN convoy routes and militarised distribution points. About No one should risk their lives trying to get their hands on food, and humanitarian workers should have rapid, safe and unfettered access to deliver aid in a dignified manner to people who are deprived of life-sustaining basics. According to the UN Children's Fund (Unicef), malnutrition among children in Gaza is reaching catastrophic proportions, while mothers are unable to feed their infants because they themselves are hungry. Since October 2023, 98 children have died from severe acute malnutrition, including 37 since 1 July this year. Water, sanitation and hygiene operations are constantly affected because fuel is in short supply. Hospitals are overburdened. As a result of a serious scarcity of beds, medical supplies and equipment, patients are suffering while lying on the floor or in the streets. The World Health Organisation recently Furthermore, UN colleagues report that According to the OCHA, Sudan Intensifying conflict, food insecurity, disease and floods continue to cause damage, suffering and loss among residents in Cholera is also spreading rapidly across Darfur. In North Darfur, in the Tawila area, about 1,200 cases have been reported since late June this year, including 300 children and 20 deaths. Unicef warns that around 640,000 children under the age of five in this area are at high risk of violence, disease and hunger. Also in South Darfur, more than 1,100 suspected cases of cholera and 64 related deaths have been reported since May this year, and a shortage of medical supplies, clean water and sanitation services is hampering the humanitarian response. There is confirmation of landmines in Khartoum State that threaten the safety of people, kill civilians and make access to health services, markets and humanitarian aid very difficult. Furthermore, Waste management systems are broken, heightening the risk of waterborne disease outbreaks. Hundreds of schools have been damaged, and many children have been out of school for months. The Sudan Humanitarian Fund, managed by the OCHA, is providing life-saving assistance to more than 600,000 people. But more funds are needed to assist vulnerable families in Sudan. More than 30 million people — almost two-thirds of the population — need urgent aid and protection this year. Syria Since the recent outbreak of violence (a couple of weeks ago), The effect of the fighting and displacement is placing enormous pressure on the already overstretched healthcare system in As-Sweida and in the neighbouring Dar'a. Mobile medical teams are working hard in Dar'a and maternal health services, trauma care and non-communicable disease management urgently need to be scaled up. Haiti In some areas of Ukraine In There are also other countries like Somalia where hundreds of thousands of people are affected by severe drought in its central and northern regions, and Mozambique where a new wave of violence in Cabo Delgado uprooted thousands of people. Without humanitarian support, the situation would be even worse for people in the countries mentioned above and in others plagued by numerous crises. Undoubtedly, humanitarian workers have helped save countless lives and bring hope where despair reigns. Tom Fletcher, under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator at the OCHA, says that despite serious difficulties in 2024, they reached almost 116 million people worldwide with effective assistance and good response speed. On World Humanitarian Day, we must say thank you to everyone involved in the global humanitarian movement, including all the committed and loyal donors and those on the front lines of these efforts. This gives immense hope and, of course, much-needed relief to so many whose lives have been shattered by conflict, the climate crisis and the disintegration of systems. Addressing these humanitarian crises is the only way of Chris Jones is emeritus associate professor in systematic theology and ecclesiology at Stellenbosch University.

Abidjan landfill transformed into city parkland
Abidjan landfill transformed into city parkland

eNCA

time08-08-2025

  • eNCA

Abidjan landfill transformed into city parkland

Beneath the fresh grass and brand-new infrastructure of Abidjan's Akouedo Park lie millions of tons of waste that for decades plagued locals' lives and health. Transforming landfill into recreational spaces -- turning trash into landscaped treasure -- has become something of a trend in recent years from New York to New Zealand. Abidjan, Ivory Coast's bustling economic hub, has now enthusiastically got in on the act. For residents of this eastern neighbourhood, covering over a landfill area, opened in 1965 and closed in 2018, is a blessing. The new park spans some 100 hectares, affording the rapidly urbanising city of some six million people an all too rare green space. After five years of construction, the urban park is ready to open, though an official date has yet to be confirmed. The radical change of scenery is a boon as the previous dumping of hazardous toxic waste had been a source of health, environmental and safety problems. - 'Good to breathe' - "We suffered a lot," Celestine Maile, who has lived in Akouedo for more than 30 years, told AFP. Today, "it feels good to breathe," she said, beaming, taking a look around the transformed surroundings. "There were mountains of garbage, and underneath, water used to flow everywhere," she recalled, of how things once were. Along with the exposure to odours and pests, the landfill constituted "a major public health problem", according to a 2019 study, which Ivorian scientists conducted on the toxicological risks to people living nearby. Its authors recommended the urgent "closure and rehabilitation" of the site, saying people living in the vicinity were "clearly exposed to poisoning from pollutants", including lead, mercury and carcinogenic chromium. Exposure to such pollution also helped give rise to conditions such as malaria, gastroenteritis and respiratory problems, the researchers said. "The garbage caused illnesses," stressed Maile, who said she suffers from eye problems linked to decades of living near the dump. Akouedo had also become a haven for drug dealing where assaults were common, she added. - 'Cemetery' resurrected - "That dump really felt like a cemetery," said Severin Alobo, who heads the office of the traditional chief of the Akouedo district. For Alobo, the creation of Akouedo Park has brought "repair" to the neighbourhood. "The name Akouedo will no longer be associated with a landfill, but with a beautiful urban park," declared Ivorian Minister of Hydraulics, Sanitation and Health Bouake Fofana. "What was lost has been largely regained," he added. AFP | Issouf SANOGO The minister said that 750 direct and indirect jobs had been created as a result of the project, which also includes a market, a middle school and the renovation of two kilometres of neighbourhood roads. Financed by the Ivorian government to the tune of 124 billion CFA francs ($221 million, 189 million euros), the overhaul also has an environmental component. The waste stored under the park will now be used for energy resources thanks to a drainage and capture system. Biogas and liquids resulting from the fermentation of the 53 million tons of accumulated waste are transported to a plant to be converted into electricity to power the park and part of the national grid. AFP | Issouf SANOGO The park has an "Environmental House" too, which Fofana said would host events on contemporary environmental issues. Visitors will be able to play sports in the park, which includes a tennis court and two football pitches. There is also a large footbridge that winds through an embryonic tropical forest and shared vegetable gardens. Like many rapidly urbanising African cities grappling with the challenge of managing waste, Abidjan has found a new, bigger substitute for the Akouedo landfill. Long the city's only waste storage site, it has been replaced by one with four times as much storage capacity in the Abidjan suburb of Kossihouen. By Lucie De Perthuis

What is sleepmaxxing? Experts debunk yet another social media 'trend'
What is sleepmaxxing? Experts debunk yet another social media 'trend'

IOL News

time07-08-2025

  • IOL News

What is sleepmaxxing? Experts debunk yet another social media 'trend'

Experts have raised alarm about the trick, following a Chinese state broadcaster's report that attributed at least one fatality in China last year to a similar "neck hanging" routine. Image: Andrea Piacquadio/Pexels From mouth taping to rope-assisted neck swinging, a viral social media trend is promoting extreme bedtime routines that claim to deliver perfect sleep -- despite scant medical evidence and potential safety risks. Influencers on platforms including TikTok and X are fueling a growing wellness obsession popularly known as "sleepmaxxing," a catch-all term for activities and products aimed at optimizing sleep quality. The explosive rise of the trend -- generating tens of millions of posts -- underscores social media's power to legitimize unproven health practices, particularly as tech platforms scale back content moderation. One so-called insomnia cure involves people hanging by their necks with ropes or belts and swinging their bodies in the air. "Those who try it claim their sleep problems have significantly improved," said one clip on X that racked up more than 11 million views. Experts have raised alarm about the trick, following a Chinese state broadcaster's report that attributed at least one fatality in China last year to a similar "neck hanging" routine. Such sleepmaxxing techniques are "ridiculous, potentially harmful, and evidence-free," Timothy Caulfield, a misinformation expert from the University of Alberta in Canada, told AFP. "It is a good example of how social media can normalize the absurd." Another popular practice is taping of the mouth for sleep, promoted as a way to encourage nasal breathing. Influencers claim it offers broad benefits, from better sleep and improved oral health to reduced snoring. But a report from George Washington University found that most of these claims were not supported by medical research. Experts have also warned the practice could be dangerous, particularly for those suffering from sleep apnea, a condition that disrupts breathing during sleep. Other unfounded tricks touted by sleepmaxxing influencers include wearing blue- or red-tinted glasses, using weighted blankets, and eating two kiwis just before bed. 'Damaging' "My concern with the 'sleepmaxxing' trend -- particularly as it's presented on platforms like TikTok -- is that much of the advice being shared can be actively unhelpful, even damaging, for people struggling with real sleep issues," Kathryn Pinkham, a Britain-based insomnia specialist, told AFP. "While some of these tips might be harmless for people who generally sleep well, they can increase pressure and anxiety for those dealing with chronic insomnia or other persistent sleep problems." While sound and sufficient sleep is considered a cornerstone of good health, experts warn that the trend may be contributing to orthosomnia, an obsessive preoccupation with achieving perfect sleep. "The pressure to get perfect sleep is embedded in the sleepmaxxing culture," said Eric Zhou of Harvard Medical School. "While prioritizing restful sleep is commendable, setting perfection as your goal is problematic. Even good sleepers vary from night to night." Pinkham added that poor sleep was often fuelled by the "anxiety to fix it," a fact largely unacknowledged by sleepmaxxing influencers. "The more we try to control sleep with hacks or rigid routines, the more vigilant and stressed we become -- paradoxically making sleep harder," Pinkham said. Beauty over health Many sleepmaxxing posts focus on enhancing physical appearance rather than improving health, reflecting an overlap with "looksmaxxing" –- another online trend that encourages unproven and sometimes dangerous techniques to boost sexual appeal. Some sleepmaxxing influencers have sought to profit from the trend's growing popularity, promoting products such as mouth tapes, sleep-enhancing drink powders, and "sleepmax gummies" containing melatonin. That may be in violation of legal norms in some countries like Britain, where melatonin is available only as a prescription drug. The American Academy of Sleep Medicine has recommended against using melatonin to treat insomnia in adults, citing inconsistent medical evidence regarding its effectiveness. Some medical experts also caution about the impact of the placebo effect on insomnia patients using sleep medication -- when people report real improvement after taking a fake or nonexistent treatment because of their beliefs. "Many of these tips come from non-experts and aren't grounded in clinical evidence," said Pinkham. "For people with genuine sleep issues, this kind of advice often adds pressure rather than relief." AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store