Jump to content

Amfani da naman kare a Najeriya

Daga Wikipedia, Insakulofidiya ta kyauta.
Amfani da naman kare a Najeriya
aspect in a geographic region (en) Fassara
Bayanai
Fuskar dog meat (en) Fassara
Ƙasa Najeriya

Ana cin Naman kare, wanda aka sani da "404", [1] saboda dalilai daban-daban a Najeriya [2] [3][4][5] Wadannan sun hada da: fifiko na abinci, imani na gargajiya, da kuma abubuwan zamantakewa da tattalin arziki.[6]

Al'adu da Tattalin Arziki

[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]

A cikin binciken 2012-2013 a Jihar Nijar, kashi 80.6% na masu amsawa, galibi maza, sun yarda suna cin nama na kare. Yawancin sun ambaci dandano (64%) a matsayin babban dalili, yayin da wasu suka lura da dalilai na magani (18.4%) ko al'ada (8.8%) a matsayin motsawa.[7]

Cinikin nama na kare yana ba da tallafin tattalin arziki ga masu yankan nama, 'yan kasuwa, da masu siyarwa.[8] Yawancin karnuka ba a haife su musamman don nama ba amma a maimakon haka ana saya su daga gidaje ko kuma an samo su a matsayin ɓarna, galibi ana jigilar su da nisa a cikin ɗakunan da ke cike da mutane ba tare da abinci ko ruwa ba.[9][7] A cikin wani binciken, an kashe karnuka sama da 470 a cikin watanni shida na lura a kasuwanni biyar a Jihar Nijar kadai.[9]

A cikin 2016 a Jihar Ekiti, an ba da rahoton cewa karnuka suna ɓacewa bayan hauhawar amfani kuma farashin babban kare a kasuwa na iya kaiwa sama da N15,000.[10]

A cikin cibiyoyin birane kamar Legas, gidajen cin abinci na naman kare na al'ada, wanda ake kira "kayan kare", sun haɓaka abokan ciniki masu aminci.[11] Abokan ciniki sun ambaci dandano da fa'idodin kiwon lafiya kamar ingantaccen libido da ƙarfin rigakafi a matsayin mahimman abubuwan da ke motsawa don amfani.[12]

Duk da wannan shahara, cinikin ya kasance ba a tsara shi ba kuma yana aiki a waje da iyakokin binciken lafiyar abinci na yau da kullun.[13]

A watan Fabrairun 2024, an ba da rahoton cewa ana cin naman kare saboda rashin sauran furotin dabba kamar yadda farashin abinci na dabba ga kaji ko kifi yana da tsada sosai.[14]

Masu fafutukar kare hakkin dabbobi da kungiyoyi masu zaman kansu na cikin gida sun nuna rashin amincewa da cin naman kare, suna mai nuna rashin tausayi da keta dokokin kare dabbobi. Kamfen ɗin su sun sami iyakantaccen nasara, saboda al'adu da tattalin arziki na cin naman kare.[11]

Jima'in Dabbobi da Yanayin Gudanarwa

[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]

An kuma tayar da damuwa game da jin daɗin dabbobi game da maganin karnuka a cikin kasuwanci. Sau da yawa ana jigilar karnuka a cikin ɗakuna masu yawa, ana gudanar da su a cikin yanayi mara kyau, kuma ana yanka su ta amfani da rauni a kai.[9][7] A wasu lokuta, ana kiyaye karnuka da rai na kwanaki da yawa ba tare da abinci ba kafin a sayar da su ko a kashe su.[9] Wadannan ayyukan suna kara haɗarin yaduwar cuta ta hanyar sarrafawa da gurɓata muhalli.

Wasu 'yan kasuwa sun yi imani da hanyoyin da ba na kimiyya ba na rigakafin cutar rabies, kamar cinye takamaiman gabobin ciki na kare da aka yi tunanin bayar da kariya, kodayake babu wani tushen kimiyya don irin wannan da'awar.[7]

  1. Augoye, Jayne (2022-04-07). "Nigeria is country with third highest dog consumption rate in the world". Premium Times. Retrieved 2025-04-26.
  2. "Recipe of the day: How to prepare dog meat Badagry style | Pulse Nigeria". www.pulse.ng (in Turanci). Retrieved 2025-04-26.
  3. Michael, Ishola (2022-01-08). "'We eat dogs and we are not ashamed of it'". Tribune Online (in Turanci). Retrieved 2025-04-26.
  4. Adenekan, Victoria (2022-04-08). "Vet doctors, global petition decry animal cruelty amid Nigeria's thriving dog meat market". Punch Newspapers (in Turanci). Retrieved 2025-04-26.
  5. Adeyemo, Bisola (2022-01-26). "VOX POP: Why Nigerians love eating dog meat". Naturenews.africa (in Turanci). Retrieved 2025-04-26.
  6. Gurumyen, Belinda Dongnaan; Akanle, Olayinka; Yikwabs, Yikwab P; Nomishan, Terngu S (2022-02-25). "ZOOTHERAPY: THE USE OF DOG MEAT FOR TRADITIONAL AFRICAN MEDICINE IN KANKE LOCAL GOVERNMENT AREA, PLATEAU STATE, NIGERIA" (PDF). Journal of Tourism and Heritage Studies, 2020. 9 (2): 15 – via HAL Open Science.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Garba, A; Dzikwi, AA; Okewole, PA; Chitunya-Wilson, BB; Tirmidhi, AB; Kazeem, HM; Umoh, JU (2013-05-29). "EVALUATION OF DOG SLAUGHTER AND CONSUMPTION PRACTICES RELATED TO THE CONTROL OF RABIES IN NIGERIA". Journal of Experimental Biology and Agricultural Sciences. 1: 126–130 – via Research Gate. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name ":0" defined multiple times with different content
  8. Nigeria, Guardian (2024-10-01). "Dog meat seller abducts six-month-old baby in Rivers". The Guardian Nigeria News - Nigeria and World News (in Turanci). Retrieved 2025-04-26.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 Ekanem, E. E.; Eyong, K. I.; Philip-Ephraim, E. E.; Eyong, M. E.; Adams, E. B.; Asindi, A. A. (2013-12-01). "Stray dog trade fuelled by dog meat consumption as a risk factor for rabies infection in Calabar, southern Nigeria". African Health Sciences. 13 (4): 1170–1173. doi:10.4314/ahs.v13i4.44. ISSN 1729-0503. PMC 4056491. PMID 24940348. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name ":1" defined multiple times with different content
  10. Ojoye, Taiwo (2016-12-29). "Dogs disappear as Ekiti residents eat canine meat". Punch Newspapers (in Turanci). Retrieved 2025-04-26.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Onyebukwa, Vivian; Okonkwo, Henry (2016-10-01). "Dog for dinner". The Sun Nigeria. Retrieved 2025-04-26. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name ":3" defined multiple times with different content
  12. Obinna, Doris (2016-06-03). "Controversy over dog meat". The Sun. Retrieved 2025-04-26.
  13. Ukamaka, Eze U.; Coetzer, Andre; Scott, Terence P.; Anene, Boniface M.; Ezeokonkwo, Romanus C.; Nwosuh, Chika I.; Nel, Louis H.; Sabeta, Claude T. (2020-02-01). "Economic and feasibility comparison of the dRIT and DFA for decentralized rabies diagnosis in resource-limited settings: The use of Nigerian dog meat markets as a case study". PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases. 14 (2). doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0008088. ISSN 1935-2735. PMC 7065817. PMID 32109246.
  14. "Nigerian women eat more dog meat than men — Wildlife expert suggests - Global African Times" (in Turanci). 2024-07-09. Retrieved 2025-04-26.