Opinions of Friday, 14 April 2023

Columnist: Charles Yeboah

Ghana's solution to the new 'Rats Czar' for New York City

rat trapped in 'anihafidie' rat trapped in 'anihafidie'

The City of New York in the United States of America (USA) has appointed a minister that will help eliminate rats infestation in the city. Miss Kathleen Corradi, a former school teacher, will be paid an annual salary of $170,000.

It's so mouthwatering and enviable to be in her new position as Director of
Rodent Mitigation. Her mandate is to lead 'wholesale slaughter' of the hated rodents, as charged by the City's Mayor, Eric Adams.

I wonder how the Apple City, amongst the richest in the world, is struggling so hard to do away with the rodents. They've tried many means, including poisoning and large traps over the years, but little results to show for.

Where I come from, a remotest village in Ghana's Bono Region, Goka, solution are in abundance to decolonise the unwanted scavenging rats.

All I will request is for the new Sheriff in town, the Rat Czar should use a tenth of her annual income to hire about a hundred boys from Goka in Ghana. They will not need any of the ubiquitous guns in the city.

'Waya' is the only weapon needed to fight, tame and eradicate the pests.

Goka is a farming community. Both peasantry and commercial farming exist. Cashew nut is the major cash crop there.

Yams, cassava, maize and coco yam will be found on everyone's farm. The farmers must protect their crops from predators like rats, grasscutters, birds and other pestering animals.

To achieve that, they set traps. They use a twisted cable locally known as 'waya' (wire) to set the traps. The 'waya' is in the likeness of the cable used for bicycle handbrake. One yard costs less than Gh₵10 or $1 in Ghana. With every one yard of the 'waya' twenty-one loops can be made to set 21 traps.

The traps come in many forms. There is 'Anihafidie' (easily set trap on a stalk). Another is 'Dadefidie' (using old and abandoned cutlass and waya/wire).

Then the most crafty one is 'Kuntunufidie'. If any rodent mistakenly steps in the loop, the stiffly dragging trap will hold the neck of the unfortunate animal
until it suffocates to death.

The rats are a delicacy in Goka too, and they will serve as an important source of protein as well back home. They always live inside a hill. Only few burrow their holes in a non-hilly soil. You can set the trap at the mouth of the hole they move into and outside the hill. When strong boys with their dogs go into
the bush to hunt for a rat to prepare a sumptuous meal, they can dig out the rat from the hole.

They thus destroy the hill which serves as an outcrop for vegetables like pepper, garden eggs and tomatoes.

Also, mushrooms grow on the hill in its season. So digging the hill to smoke out the rat is not much encouraged. The hunters can even meet a bad catch. Some holes become a habitat for cobras. They kill the natives there, the rats that burrow the hole, and the snake will occupy it.

The foregone analyses clearly indicates that Goka in Ghana presents the perfect solution to the problem New York City is facing now.

Hire the boys, give them the tools, within one year, the results will be a blueprint for the world to emulate.

Since rats are widely consumed in Ghana and in many African countries, the Americans can think of devising means to preserve and market the catch here for profit. There will be ready customers for their product no doubt.