UNBELIEVABLE: Politicians conjure power with vulture eggs to win votes
*Hire youth to climb trees with rifle, bush lamp, cutlass *Desperate politicians endangering vultures in Nigeria – Dr. Edem Eniang *Egg now cost between N1m – N2 million in the market
By Emmanuel Ayungbe
UYO
— BIRD scientists have sounded the alarm that the vulture, a
scavenging bird of prey, is going out of extinction in Nigeria because
of the epic hunt for its eggs by fetish politicians, who allegedly use
them to acquire mystical power making charms to win elections.
Those
who spoke to NDV, disclosed that the search by desperate politicians
for the eggs has intensified as 2019 approaches, cautioning that
appropriate measures be taken to safeguard one of nature’s chief vacuum
cleaners from extinction.
One of them, an Associate Professor,
Department of Forestry and Natural Environmental Management, University
of Uyo, UNIUYO, Uyo, Akwa Ibom state, Dr. Edem Eniang, told NDV that
vultures were now endangered because some Nigerian politicians use the
eggs highly demanded by native doctors for supernatural power and
preparation of voodoo to win elections.
A trader at Akparandem
Market, Uyo, who trades in birds, Madam, Etiowuwan Imoh, confirmed that
an egg of a vulture costs over N1million because of soaring demand.
Politicians,
who prefer anonymity, acknowledged in separate chats with NDV that some
desperate power seekers could go to any length to win elections, but
others feigned knowledge of the bizarre practice.
Eniang lambasts fetish politicians
Dr.
Eniang, who confirmed that vultures were disappearing in the country,
maintained that unscrupulous politicians were capitalizing on its
spiritual potency to hunt the eggs for spiritual fortification.
“The
vulture is a very special bird created by God to serve as a natural
vacuum cleaner, they clean-up all available rubbish, but the politicians
and favour seekers hunt and pick the eggs of these special creatures
for their fetish needs, diminishing their population and not allowing
the eggs to be incubated and hatched,” he lamented.
Eniang
asserted: “As it is, the existence of the vulture is greatly threatened,
as Nigerian politicians hunt desperately for its eggs. The bird is so
important that the United Nations set aside the first Saturday of
September, every year, as World Vulture Day.”
Vultures vanishing
The
environmentalist bewailed, “Today, vultures are disappearing; most
people do not even realize the importance of the existence of the
vultures. They help us to clean our environment by feeding on death
decaying materials and save us from diseases that would have spread
around from the decaying materials.”
Explaining the vultures role
in the natural cycle, he said:, “Mad persons, who die in our cities or
along the highways are allowed to rot away on the surface of the earth,
spreading diseases, but God created vultures to protect the environment.
God in his wisdom created all things for the purpose of partaking in
the ecosystem so that the balance of life will continue.”
Politicians engage youths to climb trees
According
to Eniang: “They sometimes engage community youth to climb very high
trees to get the eggs for them. These youth climb Iroko trees in the
midnight to pick vulture eggs. They climb at darkest night knowing that
the vulture does not see in the night to steal their eggs.
“Unfortunately, the vultures do not lay many eggs and they lay once in a year and the eggs are most hunted.
He
further said, “Nigerian politicians are too desperate to get power. You
do not need juju animism to win an election. Your antecedent and
pedigree should pave the way for you, not the eggs of the vulture. Do
not depend on the mystical potency of the vulture’s egg”.
N1m to N2m per egg
Inquiries
by NDV showed politicians spend as much as N1.2 million to buy a
vulture egg untouched by human hands for spiritual power allegedly
embedded in the egg, while the one touched by the human hand costs only
N20, 000 in the local market.
Besides politicians, businesspersons also seek the eggs for vulture for its alleged supernatural power.
Stalking vulture eggs
Vultures
lay their eggs on treetops usually above 40 meters high in the
forest. The common standard practice is contact hunters through
go-betweens and they pay them lavishly to supply just one egg.
It
could take a month and more for a hunter to locate the nest of a
vulture in the forest and make sure that the vulture had laid eggs
before engaging people to climb the tree at night, knowing that vulture
does not see in the night to harvest the eggs.
Those, who climb,
arm themselves with dane guns, cutlass and bush lamps to search tree
tops for vulture nests, especially the ones with eggs.
The
providential hunters it was gathered removed the entire nest with the
eggs so carefully that they do not touch the eggs with their bare hands.
They
drop their hunt into a sack bags and lowering it to the ground with the
help of a long rope before climbing down the tree to take them home
depending on how many eggs are in the nest.
A chieftain of the
All Progressives Congress, APC, Elder Enefiok Ekefre, however, said it
was speculative as nobody can boldly come out to admit knowledge of the
use of vulture egg for spiritual purpose.
Politicians practice voodoo, hypnotism- APC chieftain
He
said the constitution of Nigeria does not restrict any citizen from
practicing any specific religion, saying, “We have Christianity, Islam
and African Traditional Religion. You can belong to any of the group,
you will not have a problem with the constitution.
“Those
politicians who go to shrines have their rights. Even in Latin America,
they practice Voodooism. Some Nigerian politicians are in Ogboni and
other fraternities. Some go as far as to India to import Hinduism. I
know they do some funny things like hypnotism to influence any person or
group of persons they want to influence,” he said.
Difficult to trade in vulture – Trader
Madam,
Etiowuwan Imoh, who spoke to NDV, at Akparandem Market, said it was
very difficult to trade in vultures because everything about it was very
expensive.
“You must be a very rich business woman to trade in vulture eggs.
The whole of my life savings from this petty trade cannot buy one vulture egg. Even if you buy the egg, who will buy from you?
“You
have to wait for months before you can find one witch doctor who will
ask for the egg. Here, the fresh egg goes for nothing less than N1.2
million, while the one that human hands have mistakenly touched costs
over N20,000,” she said.
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