Oct 22, 2025 04:54 PM
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/...icine.html
EXCERPTS: Over six million donkeys are brutally slaughtered every year to make a Chinese youth serum, a charity has warned. The animals are killed for their hides, which are boiled down to make 'ejiao' - a gelatine-like substance traditionally believed to help prevent the effects of ageing.
Donkeys are often stolen for families who rely on them for their livelihoods, walked to exhaustion, and then bludgeoned with clubs before having their throats slit. Their hides are then stripped and shipped to China, where ejiao is produced on an industrial scale before being sold legally on platforms like Amazon and Etsy.
In a new documentary, titled 'From Skin to Skincare’, the animal charity Brooke and Dr Scott Miller of This Morning warn that the trade could wipe out Africa's donkey population.
Dr Miller said: 'Despite knowing the horrors of the donkey skin trade before visiting the Brooke teams in Africa, I was not prepared for what I witnessed. 'Stepping over the skulls of donkeys who had been beaten to death is something I will never forget.'
The donkeys are slaughtered in Africa under inhumane conditions before being shipped to China, where their skins are boiled to produce a gelatin-like substance used in traditional medicine and skin care. Ejiao is a traditional Chinese medicine which has been produced for over 2,000 years as an alleged cure for anaemia, insomnia, dizziness, and even cancer.
While it had historically been considered a luxury product, available only to the extremely rich, China's rapidly growing middle class has driven a massive increase in demand. According to some reports, the Chinese market for ejiao grew from $3.2 billion (£2.4 billion) in 2013 to $7.8 billion (£5.8 billion) in 2021.
Despite the African Union making it illegal to slaughter donkeys for their skin in 2024, the illegal trade has continued to kill millions of donkeys for ejiao production. These animals are often kept in appalling conditions prior to their deaths, which are frequently highly inhumane.
Speaking in Brooke's upcoming documentary, one man involved in the illegal trade said that the animals were bludgeoned with axes to stun them before cutting their throats.
[...] As the demand for ejiao continues to climb, critically endangered African wild donkeys are increasingly being smuggled alongside domestic animals. This puts the wild donkeys at a growing risk of extinction and promotes the spread of zoonotic diseases across international borders... (MORE - details)
EXCERPTS: Over six million donkeys are brutally slaughtered every year to make a Chinese youth serum, a charity has warned. The animals are killed for their hides, which are boiled down to make 'ejiao' - a gelatine-like substance traditionally believed to help prevent the effects of ageing.
Donkeys are often stolen for families who rely on them for their livelihoods, walked to exhaustion, and then bludgeoned with clubs before having their throats slit. Their hides are then stripped and shipped to China, where ejiao is produced on an industrial scale before being sold legally on platforms like Amazon and Etsy.
In a new documentary, titled 'From Skin to Skincare’, the animal charity Brooke and Dr Scott Miller of This Morning warn that the trade could wipe out Africa's donkey population.
Dr Miller said: 'Despite knowing the horrors of the donkey skin trade before visiting the Brooke teams in Africa, I was not prepared for what I witnessed. 'Stepping over the skulls of donkeys who had been beaten to death is something I will never forget.'
The donkeys are slaughtered in Africa under inhumane conditions before being shipped to China, where their skins are boiled to produce a gelatin-like substance used in traditional medicine and skin care. Ejiao is a traditional Chinese medicine which has been produced for over 2,000 years as an alleged cure for anaemia, insomnia, dizziness, and even cancer.
While it had historically been considered a luxury product, available only to the extremely rich, China's rapidly growing middle class has driven a massive increase in demand. According to some reports, the Chinese market for ejiao grew from $3.2 billion (£2.4 billion) in 2013 to $7.8 billion (£5.8 billion) in 2021.
Despite the African Union making it illegal to slaughter donkeys for their skin in 2024, the illegal trade has continued to kill millions of donkeys for ejiao production. These animals are often kept in appalling conditions prior to their deaths, which are frequently highly inhumane.
Speaking in Brooke's upcoming documentary, one man involved in the illegal trade said that the animals were bludgeoned with axes to stun them before cutting their throats.
[...] As the demand for ejiao continues to climb, critically endangered African wild donkeys are increasingly being smuggled alongside domestic animals. This puts the wild donkeys at a growing risk of extinction and promotes the spread of zoonotic diseases across international borders... (MORE - details)
