Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,320
  • Israel strikes Gaza, killing 24 before Egypt talks on Trump ceasefire plan
  • Parents see tragedy, not fault, in Indonesia school collapse
  • Gov Newsom says Trump is sending California National Guard troops to Oregon
  • White House threatens mass layoffs amid deepening US government shutdown
  • Iran says nuclear cooperation with IAEA ‘no longer relevant’
  • Trump says US hit ‘drug boat’ off Venezuela, vows land crackdown next
  • Will Israel end its occupation of Palestinian territories?
  • India beat Pakistan by 88 in Women’s Cricket World Cup to top points table
  • Contradictions in FIFA’s banning policies
  • Mass protests from Amsterdam to Istanbul denounce Israel’s Gaza genocide
  • More Gaza flotilla activists allege mistreatment in Israeli detention
  • UK police probe suspected arson attack on mosque as ‘hate crime’
  • Russell wins Singapore GP for Mercedes; McLaren secure constructors’ title
  • Why is ADL, the Jewish advocacy group, receiving blowback from MAGA?
  • Moldova’s vote is one more sign of Russia’s weakness in its ‘near abroad’
  • Video: Here’s how Syria is electing its first post-Assad parliament
  • Five killed across Ukraine in overnight Russian attacks
  • Syria’s election is “a historic moment” in its transition
  • Georgia protesters try to storm presidential palace in Tbilisi
  • Gaza bombarded despite Donald Trump telling Israel to stop
  • To end the starvation in Gaza, bring back UNRWA
  • Freed flotilla activists describe mistreatment in Israeli detention
  • Accept Trump Gaza plan or pander to far-right, Netanyahu must decide
  • Video: Huge pro-Palestinian protests held in cities across Europe

Photos: A free clinic for donkeys, vital to Ethiopia’s economy

By Al Jazeera Published 2025-05-27 03:08 Updated 2025-05-27 03:08 Source: Al Jazeera

Ethiopia is believed to host the world’s largest population of donkeys – one in five of the global total, according to the United Nations.

The humble donkey is a cornerstone of the national economy, and the Donkey Sanctuary – a free clinic run by a British charity – is crucial in Addis Ababa. Set near Merkato, the city’s sprawling open-air market, it provides care for animals that are often indispensable to their owners’ livelihoods.

Several dozen donkeys stand in enclosures at the clinic – some agitatedly kicking their legs, others hungrily tucking into their food. Caregivers and veterinarians move from animal to animal, treating a range of ailments including injuries, colic and eye conditions.

Among them is Guluma Bayi, 38, who had walked more than an hour and a half, leading his two donkeys to the clinic.

“It has been three weeks since my donkeys became sick,” said Guluma. “One has a leg problem and the other has a stomach issue.”

Like many, Guluma depends on his donkeys for his livelihood, using them to transport jerrycans of water for sale in his community.

“After they became ill, I couldn’t buy bread for my children,” he said. “I begged a guy to bring me here.”

According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, Ethiopia was home to some nine million donkeys as of 2018. In this East African nation of approximately 130 million people, donkeys play a chief economic role, ploughing fields and transporting goods – offering a low-cost alternative to vehicles at a time when the price of fuel has soared.

Another regular visitor, Chane Baye, earns his living by using his two donkeys to transport sacks of grain across the city for clients. His income can range from 200 to 400 birr per day (approximately $1.50 to $3) – a decent sum in a country where a third of the population lives below the World Bank’s poverty line of $2.15 a day.

The 61-year-old seeks out the clinic every three months or so – “whenever they start limping or have a stomach problem”, he said.

“Before this clinic, we used traditional ways to treat them,” he explained, describing how nails were once crudely removed from the animals’ legs with a knife. He is grateful that his donkeys now have access to professional care for their injuries and infections.

At the clinic, vet Derege Tsegay demonstrates the less glamorous side of his work by performing a routine but unpleasant procedure – reaching deep into a distressed donkey’s rectum, clad in a rubber glove.

Derege removes a large mass of stool that had accumulated in the animal’s digestive tract.

“It happens often,” he remarked.

A lack of adequate food in the city frequently leads donkeys to ingest whatever they find – including plastic bags – which can wreak havoc on their digestive health.

Though the work is often challenging, Derege takes pride in what he does.

“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.