Two dead after eating sheep carcass in Narok
Sheep eat at a farm. REUTERS/Jihed Abidellaoui/File Photo
Audio By Vocalize
Two
people died while eight others were left fighting for their lives after they
ate meat infected with Anthrax at the Endonyo Rasha area in Narok South.
The sub-county
veterinary officer Matthew Nchoko said the two deceased were males aged 42 and
24 years old, who had eaten the carcass of a sheep.
Nchoko
confirmed that the eight other victims who had been rushed to Ngosuani Health Center
were treated and discharged.
He
warned the public against consuming meat that is not properly inspected and
cooked to avoid causing such incidents.
“You
should not eat meat from dead animals that are not properly inspected. The
carcasses of livestock should be disposed of by burying them in deep holes to
avoid infecting other animals or people,” he said.
Anthrax,
he said, manifests in three forms namely respiratory form, digestive or as a
sore that forms a black spot at the centre.
The
veterinary doctor observed that the respiratory form is more fatal to humans as
it causes difficulties in breathing while the digestive form causes diarrhoea,
vomiting and stomach pains.
“The
disease is treatable if the patients are rushed to the hospital for treatment immediately,
they start developing the symptoms,” he said.
He
said plans are underway to vaccinate all the livestock in the area against the
disease and warned residents against touching or eating any dead livestock.
“The
county government is putting measures to vaccinate all the livestock in the
area. However, people should take personal caution and avoid eating or touching
any dead animal,” he said.
The
disease could have been caused by the presence of hundreds of wild animals that
graze freely in the company of livestock, as the area borders the Maasai Mara
National Reserve.
Residents of the sub-county are pastoralists who depend on their livestock for
survival.


Leave a Comment