POISON ON THE PLATE
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COURTESY
Humanity is threatened. The whole world has been under siege
in the hands of a virus manufactured in some sophisticated bio-safety level 4
laboratories in Wuhan, China. Conspiracy theorists claim so, and all facts point
towards that. Or will you buy the wet market narrative? Anyway, isn’t
everything made in China? The World Health Organisation (WHO) declared Covid-19
a pandemic. Many lives have been lost, and the number is escalating with each
passing day. And this forms the basis of my article. Far from the Covid-19
global crisis, Kenyans are and have been dying softly and slowly. There is a
serious concern of the rise of chemical laced foodstuff on our shelves. My
people are dying because of little knowledge. Greed is wiping out a generation
silently.
In 2011, the then Kenya Bureau of Standards (KEBS) boss Kioko
Mang’eli addressing Parliamentary Committee projected a rise in cancer cases in
this decade. Today, we are living this reality. Cancer has taken lives of the
mighty and meek in equal measure. At that moment in time, Kenya was importing maize
that had lethal levels of Aflatoxins. Did the government respond to the
revelations? What did you expect? The solutions cycle remained and remains the
same. First, they convene a commission of inquiry, and then publish a report
and recommendations. These recommendations are meant to create an impression,
and not for implementation per se. The case is buried and forgotten.
Has this trend stopped? You be the judge. Copper, mercury,
yeast and moulds are the poisons Kenyans had been consuming for long believing
it were genuine sugar. In 2019, an analysis carried out on samples of the 1,400
bags of illicit sugar seized by police in different operations revealed that
some of the sugar confiscated was contaminated with water insoluble matter.
This was a scary finding. The Ministry of Health, KEBS and Ministry of Interior
led by one Dr. Fred Matiang’i confirmed that the tests carried out by the
government chemist were shocking. The dangers that Kenyans have been exposed to
while consuming the sugar, medics note, are capable of causing some type of
cancer and harming internal organs. Despite the sacks of the sugar being
labeled as ‘not safe for human consumption’ unscrupulous traders repackaged
them into 1kg and 2kg, disguised as local brands. WHO indicates that elemental
mercury is toxic to the central and peripheral nervous system. The
international health body also points out that ingestion and inhalation of
mercury vapour can produce harmful effects on the digestive, immune systems,
lungs and kidneys. Does anybody care? The traders’ sole focus is on profits at
the expense of human health.
Do you remember the NTV’s Red
Alert expose of July 2019? The report found out that unsuspecting consumers
were, and are still buying poisonous meat from different supermarkets across
the country. The meat is laced with Sodium
metabisulfite, a chemical used to preserve food products if applied in the
right amounts. Red Alert revealed
that a number of unidentified retail chains in the country use the chemical to
stop meat from going bad before the same meat is repackaged, put on display and
marked as “fresh and juicy”. After this expose, there was a public outcry that
did not yield any fruits. We are back to business as usual. Ignorance is worse
than poverty, my good friend Allan Mulanda constantly says.
We love fruits. And throughout all seasons, we buy them to
meet our body vitamin needs. Investigations in the past have unearthed rampant
use of calcium carbide – an artificial ripening agent – by greedy traders and
supermarkets. The chemical is used to hasten ripening of bananas, oranges, mangoes
and apples for sale. The chemical uniformly ripens fruits making them
attractive to customers. Samples taken
from three leading supermarkets and groceries in Nairobi and Mombasa tested
positives for this chemical which is used for welding and making plastics.
Research has it that wholesalers in major fruits markets of Gikomba, Nairobi,
Marikiti and Kongowea in Mombasa are using the chemical secretly.
We become what we eat. The use of pesticides has skyrocketed
over the years following the emergence of the new pests and diseases as the
world struggles with harsh effects of climate change. Agricultural specialists
have raised the red flag, noting the high pesticide usage is a threat to
consumers, the environment and is unsustainable. Most Kenyan farmers are
misusing pesticides thus compromising food safety. Route to Food Initiative, a
sustainable farming organisation, elucidates that many pesticides are acutely
toxic, have long-term toxic effects, are endocrine disrupters, and are known to
cause a high incidence of severe or irreversible adverse effects. They proceed
to assert that there are products on the Kenyan market, which are certainly
classified as carcinogenic, mutagenic, endocrine disrupters, neurotoxic and
many which show clear effects on reproduction. In the same vein, Bitter Harvest,
the African Uncensored documentary on
use of pesticides in Kenya – paints a sad state of affairs, in their study,
some chemicals used in Kenya are banned in some parts of the world.
There is another thriving criminal underworld that is more
interested in transformer oil. They dice with death while siphoning oil from
the transformers. Reports have established that transformer oil is sold locally
in the shops. Researchers have disclosed that crooked fast-food owners mix the
oil with the cooking oil and use it to deep fry chips, chicken, bhajias,
samosas and mandazis among other food stuff. Apparently, unlike vegetable oil,
transformers oil is stable when heated. Therefore, these criminals mix it with
cooking oil to prevent the latter from darkening or deteriorating fast. Usually
when exposed to heat as it happens when frying fish and chips, vegetables oil
depreciates faster. But when it is mixed with transformer oil, one can reuse it
for several months without it darkening. Transformers oil, which is made from
petroleum, when used for cooking has adverse health effects on the body.
Petroleum oil contains chemicals that are unsafe when ingested. People should
be careful of what and where they eat.
Recently the police raided a godown in Kariobangi South,
Nairobi, where expired rice and sugar were being repackaged. The businessman
had been repackaging rice, sugar and popcorns in new bags showing reviewed
manufacturing and expiry dates. In the same building, Brazilian sugar
repackaged as Ndhiwa Sukari was seized. In another case, police arrested two
people who were repackaging expired wheat in Dandora, Nairobi. On different
occasions we have had many foodstuff ranging from maize flour, peanut butter to
loaves of bread being taken off the supermarket shelves over high levels of
chemicals. These usually occur after consumers have been exposed to these goods
for a substantial amount of time. If you
eat expired or spoilt food, you could develop symptoms of food poisoning. How
many times have you had food poisoning and could not trace the toxic food you
consumed? The symptoms of a food borne illness can include fever, stomach
cramps, diarrhoea, nausea, and vomiting. Expired food may contain dangerous
amounts of lethal bacteria. Notably, some bacterial toxins found in expired
food can damage the kidney and possibly be life threatening.
Do I need to remind you that the mouth-watering piece of
chicken that you regularly devour at your local restaurant or in your house
could be contaminated with Anti-Retroviral (ARV) drugs, which are meant to slow
down the horror HIV virus? Reliable information points that commercial farmers
are adding ARVs to broiler feed to enhance weight gain and are able to sell off
the fowls at four weeks. Kenyan farmers are not the only ones in this apparent
mischief, in Uganda, there are reported cases of misuse of ARVs to fatten pigs,
while in Zimbabwe, Parliament was in recent times told of instances whereby
chicken imported from Brazil being smeared with embalming fluids normally used
on dead bodies in order to preserve them and make them appear fresh by the time
of being sold. Your mama githeri and that beloved restaurant are not as
innocent as they look, they allegedly use panadol; the popular painkiller to
tenderize meat, maize, beans and green grams so as to save on cooking fuel. We
are not safe.
Months ago in Kenya, Twitter was awash with claims that a
certain brand of bread in the market was being preserved using formalin.
Formalin, a colourless substance is derived from formaldehyde, which is a known
cancer causing agent. The best known use of formalin is the preservation of
dead bodies in the mortuaries. It can also be used illegally to increase the
shelf life of fresh food. By using this unsafe preservative, the intention of
the manufacturer is to ensure longer shelf life of the product. So if these
allegations about it being used to preserve bread are true, how long have
Kenyans consumed formalin in bread? How many are at risk of contracting cancer
because of this?
Our food should be our medicine. Or medicine will be our
food. When will all these practices be addressed? Why are we digging our own
graves? Why are we this greedy? Our compromised public health institutions are
toothless and ill equipped. In most cases they are in bed with the unscrupulous
traders. We are a dying people. Ignorance is worse than poverty. My people are
dying because of greed. As we fight the killer Covid-19, we must not lose sight
of the dreaded cancer. It is time we clear the mess in the food industry if we
are to save this generation.
Allan Tom Odero
Sociologist (BA), Researcher, Socio-political Critic and a
Development Practitioner. Currently pursuing Law (LLB).

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