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Beijing Games – then it is Yarchagumba cocktail
time!
Sudha Ramachandran
Many years ago Chinese coach Ma Juergen’s army of women
stunned the world with performances that were unheard of. He had
attributed it to turtle’s blood and some Chinese concoctions. It is now
believed that Yarchagumba a caterpillar fungus possesses all those
qualities that an athlete needs hence its poaching and smuggling from
the Himalayas on the eve of the Beijing Olympics.
India's
Himalayan states, better known for their spectacular scenic beauty and
disputed borders with China, could play an important role in next
month's Summer Olympic Games in Beijing.
A
caterpillar fungus, Yarchagumba, which grows in the Indian states of
Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh is being
smuggled into China where it is believed to bestow athletes with
remarkable boosts of strength and speed.
The
fungus, Yarchagumba or Cordyceps sinesis grows on caterpillars of the
Hepilus frabricius moth. The caterpillar is found on the Tibetan plateau
and the Himalayas at an altitude of 3,000-5,000 meters. Besides the
Indian Himalayas, it is also found in Bhutan, Tibet and China's Qinghai
province.
Yarchagumba's reputed revitalizing qualities have made it a key
ingredient in Tibetan and Chinese medicine for over 1,500 years. Tibetan
villagers add it to their soups and teas to boost stamina and endurance
and improve lung capacity, kidney function and sexual performance.
Less
than 20 years ago the fungus captured the world's attention. In August
1993, at the Stuttgart World Championships, a team of unknown peasant
women from China's northeastern Liaoning province stunned the world with
their spectacular feats in track and field events. They swept all three
medals in the 3,000 meters and took gold and silver in the 10,000
meters.
A month
later, at the Chinese national championships, they shattered several
world records. Wang Junxia, who won the gold in the 10,000 meters at
Stuttgart, took the gold in the 3,000 and 10,000 meters and set three
world records in three races. Wang's time of 29:31:78 in the 10,000
meters was the first sub-30 minute performance ever by a woman, beating
the former record by a staggering 42 seconds.
Ma
Junren, the runners' controversial coach, denied allegations that their
eye-popping achievements were fueled by banned drugs. Ma attributed
their speed and stamina to grueling training over tough terrain at high
altitude. He also mentioned a certain cocktail made of turtle's blood
and caterpillar fungus.
But Ma's
methods soon came under a cocoon of controversy. Sixteen of the 19
runners, led by Wang, walked out on him over differences over prize
money and excessive discipline, protesting against his training
techniques and alleged abuse of athletes. His athletes were also testing
positive for performance-enhancing drugs. The most damning evidence came
before the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games, when Chinese authorities pulled 27
athletes from their respective teams after they failed doping tests. Six
were runners coached by Ma, implying that his runners' speed had more to
do with steroids than ingesting insect fungus.
Ma was
swarmed with controversy, but the fungus he made famous continues to
have a fan following. Demand for Yarchagumba has leapt over the past 15
years, especially since 2003 when the SARS epidemic swept Asia. The
fungus was in demand at the time for its reported ability to improve
immunity. Its street value soared; in 2005 it was selling for US$7,000
per kilogram.
The
escalating price tag triggered something of a "fungus rush" in the
Himalayas. Schools closed and villages emptied as hundreds trooped out
in search of the lucrative fungus. Yarchagumba brought sudden and
immense prosperity to those in the trade. Then came the poachers:
Bhutanese and Nepalese villagers claimed that Tibetan interlopers were
nibbling away at their profits. Over the past year, the demand for the
fungus reached new highs. In 2007, it cost around $9,000 per kg. Now it
sells for between $16,500 and $23,000 per kg.
There is
no hard evidence that the spurt in demand and prices is connected to the
onset of the Beijing Olympics, but smuggling has notably increased. The
Olympics have revived memories of the spectacular performances of
Chinese athletes in the 1990s and with nostalgia has come a renewed
interest in the now legendary Yarchagumba.
Indian
newsmagazine Outlook reported that in July alone two attempts at
smuggling the fungus were foiled. In the first, a soldier of Assam
Rifles, a paramilitary unit, was caught with 500 grams of caterpillar
fungus and several hundreds of thousands of rupees in Bageshwar in the
northern Himalayan state of Uttarakhand. The other incident was in
Sikkim, where three smugglers were caught with 17 kg of the fungus.
Profits
from the fungus have financed insurgencies, incited murders and prompted
neighboring villages to go to war. Nepal's Maoists controlled the
caterpillar fungus trade in the Dolpa district, which accounts for over
half of Nepal's fungus supply. At least two recent murders in
Uttarakhand have been attributed to quarrels over the fungus trade. And
in July last year, a dispute over caterpillar-picking rights triggered
an armed clash in China's Tibetan-dominated Dabba county in Sichuan
province. Six people were killed and over a hundred injured.
Will the
2008 Olympics see athletes reaching out for Ma's famous caterpillar
fungus cocktail? Will victorious Chinese athletes thank the humble
highland fungus for their achievements?
Asian
athletes recovering from injuries sometimes digest deer's penis, or turn
to turtle blood to improve blood circulation. Others devour animal feet
to strengthen their legs. But Chinese sports authorities, anxious to
avoid embarrassing doping scandals, are warning Olympians off
traditional remedies because some contain banned substances like as
herbal ephedrine. But some athletes are still likely to seek the
purported properties of traditional medicine. And as long as they seek
the elusive elixirs of athleticism, neither the turtles nor the fungus
will be able to breathe easily. |