Members of the House of Representatives from Benue
State on Wednesday disagreed among themselves on whether
to eat rats or not.
The
rodent, which lives in both bushes and human homes, is a delicacy widely
consumed in Benue State, particularly among the Tiv tribe.
The
rat is also one of the known carriers of the deadly Lassa fever virus, which
has claimed 41 lives in its resurgence in Nigeria.
But, on Wednesday, as the House debated a
motion calling on the Federal Government to urgently contain the spread of the
virus, lawmakers from Benue State got into an argument over the consumption of
rats.
The motion on the virus was originally sponsored by
a member from Imo State, Mr. Chike Okafor.
Okafor only urged the House to intervene by
advising relevant government health agencies to contain the spread of the
virus. But Mr. Hassan Saleh, from the Idoma tribe of Benue State stirred the
disagreement when he called for a total ban on the eating of rats.
“People should stop eating rats; the disease is
dangerous,” said Saleh, representing Ogbadibo/Ado/Okpokwu Federal Constituency.
“We have lost lives and the fear is that this is
more than when the Ebola Virus was here. So, people should stop eating rats.”
In response, his Tiv brothers, the Chairman, House
Committee on Federal Capital Territory, Mr. Herman Hembe; and the Chairman,
House Committee Rules and Business, Mr. Oker Jev, immediately opposed his
suggestion by urging the Speaker, Mr. Yakubu Dogara, to call Saleh to order.
The two chorused that stopping the eating of rats
could not be the solution.
Hembe, who represents Konshisha Federal
Constituency, raised his hand several times, shaking his head in disagreement
while insisting that he must speak to counter Saleh’s suggestion.
He eventually jumped up to speak without being
recognised, but the speaker politely turned him down, saying he would not allow
the chamber to be turned into a rats affair, amid a thunderous laughter on the
floor.
Saleh thereafter left his seat to confer with Hembe
and Jev on their seats. The three lawmakers later shook hands and resumed their
legislative work.
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