SHOCKING BREAKING NEWS!! THOUSAND WILL BE DEAD!! UNBELIEVEABLE! This Is Now Selling in Lagos: Fruits of Death (Must Read)
A yet another shocking investigative and explosive report has
revealed that the fruit you are gnawing on to do your body the desired
good, may send you six feet below in a black body bag.
Fruit lovers can no longer munch away at their desired fruits with
reckless abandon as it used to be. Now, as you munch, suck, lick or
drink, you have to keep your eyes and other senses wide open – including
your sixth sense.
That fruit you are gnawing on may do your body the desired good you
hope for, or send you six feet below in a black body bag. That is the
effect the demand for fruits have caused in Nigeria, and Lagos
especially.
Why the message of doom you may ask. It is because of the penchant
of some daredevil fruit sellers who hasten the ripening process of the
fruits with harmful chemicals such as carbide.
Gone were the days when food poisoning was something done
deliberately for prepared food for certain people. These days, a bite of
a seemingly harmless, nutritious, delicious and rotund apple or banana
can result in unexpected food poisoning – all through carbide.
Calcium carbide is a chemical used for artificially ripening fruit.
According to experts, when calcium carbide comes in contact with
moisture, it produces acetylene gas, which is quite similar in its
effects to the natural ripening agent, ethylene. Acetylene acts like
ethylene and accelerates the ripening process.
Industrial-grade calcium carbide may also contain traces of arsenic and phosphorus, which makes it a human health concern. Other ripening agents include ethephon (an insecticide), ethanol, ethylene glycol and methanol
While the use of this chemical for this purpose is illegal in most
countries, Nigeria appears not to have gotten the memo. If it has, the
people’s consciousness has not been awakened enough to the effects in
the fruits being sold and distributed here in Nigeria.
Just over a year ago, a reporter was poisoned through these process and ended up dying due to complications thereafter.
At Agboju market in Amuwo Odofin in Lagos, a source at the market
pointed at a spot where fruits were being forced to ripen with
chemicals. She explained that the fruits that were unripe were forced to
ripen within a day, as the sellers use carbide to achieve that purpose.
In an attempt to speak with some of the fruit sellers, they all
claimed to be getting their friuts almost ripe before they sell them.
Yet our reporter saw heaps of banana being carried into the spot he was
told the ripening normally take place.
A seller who pleaded anonymity said that it is a trick they have
been using for a long time and it helps their business. According to
her, they buy unripe plantain and banana in bulk. Since they cannot
predict when they will sell everything, they ripen them batch after
batch for daily sales.
The seller, however when confronted with the fact that the
chemicals they use are harmful, said that she had heard of such before,
but she and her colleagues are careful as the make sure that the
chemicals do not directly come in contact with the products.
A reporter also went into the popular Sunday Market at Ogba, to
speak with some fruit sellers and got their opinions and methods of
ripening fruits. Many of them claimed to know nothing of fast-ripening
of fruits.
A woman who refused to give her name however shared that it is
mostly bananas and plantains, which she sells that she puts through many
processes. She, however, explained that she does not make use of any
form of chemicals, but she wets the fruits with normal water and then
wraps them in several layers of a sack for a couple of days.
She explained that her banana and plantain stocks, which are
ripened in this manner usually come out fresh and can stay for days
without going bad. She also added that she was aware of the fact that
people use carbide to ripen seasonal fruits like mango, banana,
cucumber, plantain, pineapple, watermelon, guava, pawpaw and even others
like apple, tomatoes, and grapes. But she said those who do that know
themselves, but she and her colleagues in the market do not.
These act were found to be common in urban cities, especially in
Lagos. Since the fruits are mostly brought in from other parts of the
country, it is difficult to control supply. So, retailers tend to use
these unnatural methods to ripen fruits to meet demand.
A food nutritionist explained the process of carbide ripening.
“Most fruits are picked long before they are ripe for easy
transportation. The moment the fruits are sizeable, for example
plantain, it is immediately cut down and shipped. Some fruits are able
to continue ripening after being picked, however, others can ripen only
on the plant and thus have a short shelf life if harvested when they are
ripe. This makes it tricky to harvest, ship and sell.”
She further revealed that sometimes, plantain on its own would take
another one to two months to ripen, but they harvest it all the same.
Once harvested, because they need to sell it for good profit especially
when it is not in season, they rub the fruits copiously with carbide and
then wrap them in black plastic bags to attract light. Then, they hide
it in warm dark corners and leave it overnight. By the time they open it
up in the morning, the previously unripe bananas are ripe.
When asked where they procure such harmful chemicals like carbide
from, the expert explained that there are a number of sources, the
easiest being through panel beaters who come across the substance
easily.
The story of a staff of Independent Newspapers who died from kidney
failure after eating bananas he bought from Ojota bus-stop, Lagos on
December 24, 2016 immediately comes to mind. This tells us that
quickened ripening of fruits is not as alien or difficult to come by as
was once thought, a confirmation of Mrs. Oni’s words.
A young man recently shared his experience that nearly took his
life. He explained that he bought roasted plantain, (boli) a favourite
Nigerian delicacy usually eaten with groundnuts, from a roadside vendor
and planned to eat it for dinner.
Upon tasting the plantain, he realised something was different and
was unable to finish it, so he abandoned it. He woke up with a mild
stomach ache in the middle of the night, but after an hour of consuming
salt and water mixture with the hope of relief, he realised he was in
trouble and was taken to the hospital by his family. He was confirmed to
have been poisoned and when the remnant of his ‘boli’ was tested, it
was discovered that the poisoning agent was carbide.
After he was treated and discharged, he shared that he went to
confront the seller who chased him off with a broom saying “don’t you
want me to sell market?” Evidently, the hundred naira for the boli was
worth more to her than the life of the young man.
Another man explained his experience after eating bananas bought in
Ikeja, Lagos axis. He explained that while the banana looked fresh and
ripe on the outside, the fruit inside was a different case as it tasted
unripe and hard. While he smartly stopped eating the said fruits
immediately he noticed this, the little he had consumed took its toll
and he felt uncomfortable. He stated that his discomfort and several
visits to the toilet did not abate the pain and he immediately went to
the hospital. It was while at the hospital that he was confirmed to be
suffering the effects of food poisoning.
These cases are not isolated as there are hundreds more of such reported and unreported cases of fruit related food poisoning.
Fruits are supposed to be the most natural and nutritious edibles
consumed by man, but here in Nigeria, they have become death traps.
Speaking with Mrs. Rufai, a pharmacist, she explained that carbide
is simply poison. Therefore introducing that into the system of a living
thing would cause a fatal reaction.
Dr. Damian Avar, a General Practitioner and the founder and CEO of
DoctorsHub Nigeria explained in an interview that “while there are a few
ripening agents out there, calcium carbide (used in welding) is the
most used agent because it is very cheap to buy and it is also easily
available. When the calcium carbide mixes with water, it releases a
garlic-smelling gas, acetylene, which performs a similar ripening action
as ethylene- the natural ripening agent that ripens fruits. Calcium
carbide is replete with toxic metals like arsenic and lead, and some
traces of phosphorus hydride. For this singular reason, calcium carbide
has been banned for use as a ripening agent in most developed countries
of the world.
Apart from making the fruits less juicy, less tasty, have shorter
lives and making them lose their natural flavours and aromas, calcium
carbide has been found to cause the following health hazards like
diarrhoea with or without blood, severe gastrointestinal upset,
permanent eye damage, stomach ulcer, severe irritation of the skin,
mouth, and throat, liver injury amongst other.
By every conceivable metric, fruits ripened with carbide have far
more severe outcomes than the consumption of unripe fruits. For unripe
fruits, it is just the high acid content of the fruits that make them
unhealthy for consumption. One thing is for sure, consumption of
artificially ripened fruits can manifest health complications, severe
enough to cause death.”
Another expert confirmed all the gathered information. He explained
that “for example, banana fruits are picked when green before their
maturity date and artificially ripened after shipment by being gassed
with ethylene. Calcium Carbide (CaC2) hastens the ripening process when
CaC2 comes in contact with water; it produces acetylene gas that hastens
the ripening of several fruits such as mangoes, bananas, and apples.
However, the problem lies in whether these traders have the
necessary knowledge or incentive to carry out this process in the
correct manner. The fruits are stacked in a room, all ventilation to the
room is then blocked off, and the fruits will ripen in three to five
days in the gas (ethylene) that is released.
This substance ensures that there is uniform ripening of the
fruits. In addition, the fruits retain their flavour. Research, however,
shows that either using ethel (another ripening agent) or CaC2; the
chemical must not touch the fruits.
Research further conducted shows the properties of CaC2 and warned
against its use to ripen fruits. In a related report, it states that
CaC2 is a chemical, which is commonly used by traders to ripen fruits in
the local markets. This compound is known to contain impurities such as
arsenic & phosphorous and is extremely hazardous to human health.
Consumers who are unaware of these inappropriate ripening
procedures adopted may inadvertently take in these toxic compounds,
which are found on the surface of the commodities or when these
compounds penetrate the dermal layers of the product to lodge in the
flesh of the fruits.
Emphatically, traders have been seen applying carbide directly onto
the fruits, as most of the traders feel alternative and safer ripening
process methods suggested were impracticable and not cost effective.”
The question now is “who secures the health of Nigerians from the
greedy disposition of the fruit of death sellers?” Yes, we have the
Ministry of Health and the National Agency for Food And Drug
Administration and Control, but do they actually regulate the so-called
naturally produced foods we eat?
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