We Will Export Hyena Testicles And Snakes To Help Settle Chinese Debt; Wajackoyah Says
On a Roots party platform, Wajackoyah is running for president with Justina Wamae as his running partner. However, the alleged “absurdity” of the duo’s manifesto has come to symbolize their campaign. Wajackoyah thinks that legalizing marijuana production would be crucial to reviving Kenya’s economy.
Aside from marijuana, the presidential candidate for the Root’s party claims that exports of dog and snake venom might be a gold mine for Kenya if they are legalized. On June 30, when he unveiled his manifesto, Wajackoyua added eating hyena testicles to his bucket list.
He claims that because of the hyena’s therapeutic potential, the Chinese have a high regard for them. He claimed that many carnivores with no worth or significance had their home in Kenya. Hyenas would be sold to China, where they are a delicacy and the contents of their testicles are utilized as medicine, if he were to take office after August 9.
According to Wajackoya, all of them would bring Kenya money. “We shall export hyena meat to China. 1,000 hyenas have 2,000 testicles. Chinese use hyena testicles as medicine. A testicle costs about KSh 6 million. It is much more than ganja. We shall export the testicles, dog meat and hyenas,” he said.
Wajackoyah had earlier declared that he will legalize snake farming if he wins the election on August 9 and becomes office.
He claimed that Kenya might profit from the anti-venom industry and reduce its present debt to China and other creditors. The politician noted that there are many snakes in the nation while speaking in an interview with Citizen TV on June 8th.
He complained that despite having many snakes, Kenya had to rely on other nations for anti-venom.“I will introduce snake farming in this country. Many people are bitten by snakes and you have to wait for antidotes from outside the country, yet we have many snakes here,” he said. He claimed that in his administration he would set up an industry where venom will be extracted from the reptiles and then used in manufacturing anti-venom products.
Wajackoyah further mentioned that some countries consider snake flesh to be a delicacy; as a result, Kenya might sell snake meat to expand its revenue-generating plans. “We have so many snakes in this country and we have so many snake eaters. One of the ways we are going to offset debt is by taking these snakes, extracting poison from them and manufacturing them into anti-venom and shipping the reptiles to other countries where they are consumed,” Wajackoyah explained.