<p>In a clamorous bazaar, hot-blooded Pakistani men seek a cold-blooded cure for their sexual ills -- freshly rendered lizard fat, marinated in scorpion oil and garnished with filaments of a fiery red spice.</p>.<p>Unsurprisingly, the black market balm known as "sanda tael" -- cola-coloured, with the whiff of burnt frying pan -- has absolutely no scientific backing.</p>.<p>It also relies on poaching the reclusive Hardwicke's spiny-tailed lizard, which is cruelly butchered on the pavement before its innards are cooked on a crude gas hob.</p>.<p>"You just apply five drops over the affected area and massage," said Yasir Ali, one of four vendors in Rawalpindi's Raja Bazaar.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/pakistan-confirms-its-first-case-of-mpox-1213174.html" target="_blank">Pakistan confirms its first case of mpox</a></strong><br /><br />"It does magic in terms of promoting sexual stamina," the 40-year-old told <em>AFP.</em></p>.<p>As he speaks, a lounge of paralysed lizards is spread out on his tarpaulin sheet cluttered with glass vials.</p>.<p>Ali entices a gaggle of customers perusing his potions by telling them it is "a solution to bring joy and happiness" which will make them "strong like steel".</p>.<p>"It will make your wife happy," he promises with a glint in his eye. "Buy it and try it."</p>.<p>Sultan Mehmood, 62, a user for three decades says it "works like a miracle", as he launches into a vivid description of his sexual performance.</p>.<p>The meek lizards -- measuring up to 60 centimetres (24 inches) as adults -- are plucked from the plains of Punjab and Sindh provinces as they peep out of their burrows to sunbathe.</p>.<p>As night fades, Muhammad Nasir, 25, lays a web of fishing wire snares on the arid plateaus surrounding the village of Adiala, 20 kilometres (12 miles) south of Islamabad. Within hours he has caught more than a dozen.</p>.<p>"We break the lizards' back after capturing them," the fourth-generation poacher said. "This is done to make sure they don't run away, because the animal moves with the speed of a bullet."</p>.<p>"Sometimes it's quite painful to hunt these lizards and deprive them of their right to live in a natural habitat, but this is how we make a living."</p>.<p>In a nation where social pressure dictates couples produce sprawling families, infertility is deeply stigmatised and Viagra is outlawed, the quack remedy for sexual impotence remains popular.</p>.<p>But Islamabad clinician Ahmad Shahab says the trade is capitalising on naivety stemming from the taboo of sexuality in deeply conservative Pakistan.</p>.<p>"It is absolutely rubbish and there is no truth in claims that the oil helps," Shahab said.</p>.<p>"Sex is a subject people are quite curious about and these quacks are making fools out of them," he added.</p>.<p>"We have to change the mindset of our people and to educate them."</p>.<p>WWF senior research and conservation manager Jamshed Iqbal Chaudhry agreed claims of healing properties are "totally false and devoid of any truth".</p>.<p>The International Union for Conservation of Nature classes the spiny-tailed lizards as "vulnerable".</p>.<p>"The over-exploitation of lizards will lead them to the verge of extinction," Chaudhry warned.</p>.<p>Ali, the vendor, says he has been arrested "many times" by wildlife protection officers, but after fines no larger than 10,000 rupees ($35) he was freed to continue his trade.</p>.<p>Ali cuts the sand-coloured lizards' necks while they are immobilised but alive -- ending their 15-year lifespan -- and melts down the fat inside their plump bellies.</p>.<p>He says the unction is infused with saffron -- an exorbitantly expensive spice -- but given the oil sells for between 600 and 1,200 rupees ($2 to $4) that seems unlikely.</p>.<p>He also claims its miracle properties include healing joint aches, back pain, sciatica and hair loss.</p>.<p>"I have regular customers from Saudi Arabia, Dubai, Sharjah, Malaysia and several African countries," he boasts.</p>.<p>Muhammad Azam, 65, remains unconvinced.</p>.<p>"It's nothing but a fraudulent activity," he said. "I used this medicine but found it useless. It's full of germs and bacteria."</p>.<p>Still, Ali's fellow vendor Muhammad Rafiq, 40, says others turn to the oil "to satisfy their wives and to have children".</p>.<p>"This is a great human desire which is undeniable," he said.</p>
<p>In a clamorous bazaar, hot-blooded Pakistani men seek a cold-blooded cure for their sexual ills -- freshly rendered lizard fat, marinated in scorpion oil and garnished with filaments of a fiery red spice.</p>.<p>Unsurprisingly, the black market balm known as "sanda tael" -- cola-coloured, with the whiff of burnt frying pan -- has absolutely no scientific backing.</p>.<p>It also relies on poaching the reclusive Hardwicke's spiny-tailed lizard, which is cruelly butchered on the pavement before its innards are cooked on a crude gas hob.</p>.<p>"You just apply five drops over the affected area and massage," said Yasir Ali, one of four vendors in Rawalpindi's Raja Bazaar.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/pakistan-confirms-its-first-case-of-mpox-1213174.html" target="_blank">Pakistan confirms its first case of mpox</a></strong><br /><br />"It does magic in terms of promoting sexual stamina," the 40-year-old told <em>AFP.</em></p>.<p>As he speaks, a lounge of paralysed lizards is spread out on his tarpaulin sheet cluttered with glass vials.</p>.<p>Ali entices a gaggle of customers perusing his potions by telling them it is "a solution to bring joy and happiness" which will make them "strong like steel".</p>.<p>"It will make your wife happy," he promises with a glint in his eye. "Buy it and try it."</p>.<p>Sultan Mehmood, 62, a user for three decades says it "works like a miracle", as he launches into a vivid description of his sexual performance.</p>.<p>The meek lizards -- measuring up to 60 centimetres (24 inches) as adults -- are plucked from the plains of Punjab and Sindh provinces as they peep out of their burrows to sunbathe.</p>.<p>As night fades, Muhammad Nasir, 25, lays a web of fishing wire snares on the arid plateaus surrounding the village of Adiala, 20 kilometres (12 miles) south of Islamabad. Within hours he has caught more than a dozen.</p>.<p>"We break the lizards' back after capturing them," the fourth-generation poacher said. "This is done to make sure they don't run away, because the animal moves with the speed of a bullet."</p>.<p>"Sometimes it's quite painful to hunt these lizards and deprive them of their right to live in a natural habitat, but this is how we make a living."</p>.<p>In a nation where social pressure dictates couples produce sprawling families, infertility is deeply stigmatised and Viagra is outlawed, the quack remedy for sexual impotence remains popular.</p>.<p>But Islamabad clinician Ahmad Shahab says the trade is capitalising on naivety stemming from the taboo of sexuality in deeply conservative Pakistan.</p>.<p>"It is absolutely rubbish and there is no truth in claims that the oil helps," Shahab said.</p>.<p>"Sex is a subject people are quite curious about and these quacks are making fools out of them," he added.</p>.<p>"We have to change the mindset of our people and to educate them."</p>.<p>WWF senior research and conservation manager Jamshed Iqbal Chaudhry agreed claims of healing properties are "totally false and devoid of any truth".</p>.<p>The International Union for Conservation of Nature classes the spiny-tailed lizards as "vulnerable".</p>.<p>"The over-exploitation of lizards will lead them to the verge of extinction," Chaudhry warned.</p>.<p>Ali, the vendor, says he has been arrested "many times" by wildlife protection officers, but after fines no larger than 10,000 rupees ($35) he was freed to continue his trade.</p>.<p>Ali cuts the sand-coloured lizards' necks while they are immobilised but alive -- ending their 15-year lifespan -- and melts down the fat inside their plump bellies.</p>.<p>He says the unction is infused with saffron -- an exorbitantly expensive spice -- but given the oil sells for between 600 and 1,200 rupees ($2 to $4) that seems unlikely.</p>.<p>He also claims its miracle properties include healing joint aches, back pain, sciatica and hair loss.</p>.<p>"I have regular customers from Saudi Arabia, Dubai, Sharjah, Malaysia and several African countries," he boasts.</p>.<p>Muhammad Azam, 65, remains unconvinced.</p>.<p>"It's nothing but a fraudulent activity," he said. "I used this medicine but found it useless. It's full of germs and bacteria."</p>.<p>Still, Ali's fellow vendor Muhammad Rafiq, 40, says others turn to the oil "to satisfy their wives and to have children".</p>.<p>"This is a great human desire which is undeniable," he said.</p>