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Cow slaughter, India’s gau rakshaks (cow vigilantes), and lynchings

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A 25 year old transporting buffalo meat in a pick up truck from Ghasera to a shop near Gurgaon's Jama Masjid was allegedly beaten with sticks by a group of men this morning. Accused also allegedly misbehaved with police personnel who reached the spot. FIR lodged. <a href="https://twitter.com/IndianExpress?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@IndianExpress</a> <a href="https://t.co/UPUXjNfIpm">pic.twitter.com/UPUXjNfIpm</a></p>— Sakshi Dayal (@sakshi_dayal) <a href="https://twitter.com/sakshi_dayal/status/1289187262169636864?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 31, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>


I have never seen in my life any worst visuals of mob lynching as have been emerging from India in recent times. Most of the people in India especially these "jobless illiterates " are Scumbags, barring few. The majority of them are heartless.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Man Bashed With Hammer By Cow Vigilantes As Gurgaon Cops Watch <a href="https://t.co/PPyB5W5WzF">https://t.co/PPyB5W5WzF</a> <a href="https://t.co/oWFYu4Jwbi">pic.twitter.com/oWFYu4Jwbi</a></p>— NDTV (@ndtv) <a href="https://twitter.com/ndtv/status/1289371705517867008?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 1, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

New Delhi: With impunity and a hammer, an unarmed man is savagely beaten and kicked to pulp while the police and dozens of people do little more than watch, shows the video, demonstrating the horrific collapse of law near the country’s capital.
Around 9 am on Friday, not too far away from Gurgaon’s glistening towers that house the offices of multinational software companies, a group of cow vigilantes chasing a pick-up truck for about 8 km managed to flag it down.

The driver, identified as Lukman, was pulled out and brutally assaulted on the suspicion that he was smuggling cow meat in an incident with chilling echoes of the 2015 Dadri mob lynching in Noida, also very close to Delhi.

Just like Dadri, the police were faster at sending the meat to a lab for testing than catching any one of the suspects. One of the assailants - Pradeep Yadav - has been arrested. The video of the incident recorded by witnesses shows the faces of the assailants. “We have identified more people,” Gurgaon’s Additional Commissioner of Police Pritpal Singh said on Saturday.

https://www.ndtv.com/gurgaon-news/g...ammer-by-cow-vigilantes-as-cops-watch-2272290
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This is yet Another broad daylight lynching by cow vigilantes. Despite India approaching the peak of the coronavirus, it has not stopped cow vigilantes from publicly lynching Muslims.<a href="https://twitter.com/zoo_bear?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@zoo_bear</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/kawalpreetdu?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@kawalpreetdu</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/kavita_krishnan?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@kavita_krishnan</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/NabiyaKhan11?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@NabiyaKhan11</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/Dame_Lillard?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@Dame_Lillard</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/sameeryasir?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@sameeryasir</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/MuzamilJALEEL?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@MuzamilJALEEL</a> <a href="https://t.co/BgB3PHhodV">pic.twitter.com/BgB3PHhodV</a></p>— Nasir Khuehami (ناصر کہویہامی) (@NasirKhuehami) <a href="https://twitter.com/NasirKhuehami/status/1294883094428696576?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 16, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This is yet Another broad daylight lynching by cow vigilantes. Despite India approaching the peak of the coronavirus, it has not stopped cow vigilantes from publicly lynching Muslims.<a href="https://twitter.com/zoo_bear?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@zoo_bear</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/kawalpreetdu?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@kawalpreetdu</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/kavita_krishnan?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@kavita_krishnan</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/NabiyaKhan11?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@NabiyaKhan11</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/Dame_Lillard?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@Dame_Lillard</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/sameeryasir?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@sameeryasir</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/MuzamilJALEEL?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@MuzamilJALEEL</a> <a href="https://t.co/BgB3PHhodV">pic.twitter.com/BgB3PHhodV</a></p>— Nasir Khuehami (ناصر کہویہامی) (@NasirKhuehami) <a href="https://twitter.com/NasirKhuehami/status/1294883094428696576?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 16, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

This is getting ridiculous and out of hand now.
 
Further proof of why QeA was so right. Thank God for Pakistan.
 
When the country’s leaders not only a turn a blind eye towards it but also encourage it, one can only expect the situation to get worse.

Dont the people doing such lynchings have a brain cell between them? Kill a human over an animal, how stupid can one be?
 
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/W3-9EBqwPdg" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>.
 
Report this to the police! I’m sure they will catch the cul… oh.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">UP police accused of another brutal assault on Muslim man on suspicion of cow slaughter<a href="https://twitter.com/SunilK07638741?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@SunilK07638741</a> reports: <a href="https://t.co/ggzbTNd0aB">https://t.co/ggzbTNd0aB</a> <a href="https://t.co/rHPPA1IJEe">pic.twitter.com/rHPPA1IJEe</a></p>— The Caravan (@thecaravanindia) <a href="https://twitter.com/thecaravanindia/status/1303309008887934977?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 8, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
[MENTION=151350]Mesozoic[/MENTION]

It's systematic?


What ?


Report this to the police! I’m sure they will catch the cul… oh.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">UP police accused of another brutal assault on Muslim man on suspicion of cow slaughter<a href="https://twitter.com/SunilK07638741?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@SunilK07638741</a> reports: <a href="https://t.co/ggzbTNd0aB">https://t.co/ggzbTNd0aB</a> <a href="https://t.co/rHPPA1IJEe">pic.twitter.com/rHPPA1IJEe</a></p>— The Caravan (@thecaravanindia) <a href="https://twitter.com/thecaravanindia/status/1303309008887934977?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 8, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>



Caravan is the pseudo liberal equivalent of Opindia, Swarajya Marg etc. So, don't know how true this is as they're known for peddling a lot of fake stories.
 
What ?






Caravan is the pseudo liberal equivalent of Opindia, Swarajya Marg etc. So, don't know how true this is as they're known for peddling a lot of fake stories.

If it's anything that puts India in bad light you always question the source. Typical.
 
"Earlier, reporters called, local politicians called. Now, the frequency with which people want to know about the case has dropped. Lynchings have become so normalised in India, that they don't shock anyone's conscience anymore," 51-year-old Jaan Mohammad Saifi, the 2015 Dadri lynching victim Mohammad Akhlaq's brother, said to The Quint from his home in Dadri.

It has now been five years since Akhlaq, whose real name is Ikhlaq, was murdered on the suspicion of consuming and storing cow meat in his home in Uttar Pradesh's Dadri district on 28 September 2015.

Akhlaq was dragged and beaten by a frenzied mob around 10:30 pm on 28 September 2015.(Photo: The Quint)
The 50-year-old, who was an electrician and mechanic by trade, was killed by a frenzied mob while his son Danish suffered severe injuries. Nineteen of the accused were named in the testimonies of three witnesses – Akhlaq's wife Ikrama, daughter Shahista and Danish. Of the 19, 18 were charge sheeted by December 2015, the family said.


Despite the case being moved to a fast-track court in Noida, the charges are yet to be framed in the case. This is the very first step for the case to move to trial.

We spoke to Akhlaq’s family and his lawyer, as well as relatives of the accused in Bisada village, to expose how fractured the idea of community and justice has been ever since the Dadri lynching of September 2015.

"The relatives of the 18 accused have come to meet us at least 40-odd times in the last five years. Every time they'll start with downplaying how their boys made a mistake and quickly follow this up with the cow slaughter case they have registered against us. It is a sinister move on their part to create pressure on us," Jaan Mohammad Saifi said.

In June 2016, a case of cow slaughter was filed against Akhlaq's family members on the directions of the district court. Amongst the accused are Jaan Mohammad Saifi, Ikrama, Shahista and Danish.

An investigation done by The Quint in August 2016 revealed how the complainant, Surajpal, had himself not witnessed Akhlaq and his family members slaughter a cow.

Dadri Lynching: FIR Against Akhlaq’s Family a Conspiracy?

"The case is baseless, which is why the local police was also not registering it," Jaan Mohammad Saifi said. "The relatives then try to posture us as those who have killed cows. They then tell us that if we take our case back, so will they."

The last time two accused visited Jaan Mohammad Saifi was about six months ago, before COVID-19 halted lives and movement.

"Always remember that those who have committed a crime will never want to make enemies or hold grudges, but why should someone who has lost a loved one in the family show undue sympathy? Despite that, I have always served them tea when they have visited. They are, at the end of the day, from my own village," said Jaan Mohammad Saifi, who betrays an affinity to his neighbours from the village of his forefathers. None of the family members, including the families of Akhlaq and his brothers, Mohammad Jameel Saifi, Mohammad Afzal Saifi and Jaan Mohammad Saifi himself, have ever gone back.

The only real connection to their village is four homes of the four brothers that have been lying locked up ever since. Jaan Mohammad says he is looking to find a buyer for his home in Bisada village.

"Once about a year ago, someone wanted to buy our home, but due to the collective pressure of the villagers it never materialised," he said.

Back in Bisada village, the relatives of the accused are worried any media attention on the subject will hurt their chances to strike a compromise.

"Is case ke baarein mein mat likhiye. Media mein baat aayegi toh nuksaan ho jayega. Logo ke purane zakham phir khul jayenge. Baat jitni purani padhti jaayegi, utna mamla thanda hota jayega. Jitna media mein aayega, utne garam rahega (Don’t write about this case. If this matter is raised in the media, then it will harm us. Old wounds will open again. On the other hand, if the matter is left alone, then the issue will cool down)," Om Mahesh, whose son and nephew are amongst the seventeen accused out on bail, told The Quint, as he openly chuckled.

Of the 18 accused, 17 are currently out on bail while one of them died in custody in October 2016 of Chikungunya. Mahesh claims to know the case the best in the village and says he talks for all accused.

"Each and every one of them is innocent. There was a mob of people, someone hit him with a brick, someone with a stick and he died. We had sympathy for his death, but instead of giving us credit, his family has named us an accused and is trying to screw us over," Mahesh said. He is sitting with various elders in the village, who can be heard agreeing with him loudly over the phone call.

Inside Mohammad Akhlaq’s house in Bisada, Dadri, right after he was killed.(Photo: <b>The Quint</b>)
Explaining the traditions prevalent in villages, he says that the older people in the village come together and strike a compromise.

Speaking about a similar case of death due to suspicion of cow slaughter, Mahesh said, "A few days after this case, there is an area called Kripa Ganj close to Etawah, where Thakurs and Yadavs had killed two Muslims over a similar case*. However, you will find nothing in the media about it. People got together and did not even let an FIR be registered. However, in our village, they are not letting us compromise. Political leaders paid the media to hype the issue and the media glare ensured we could not find a peaceful solution."

He agrees that the various accused and their relatives have met Akhlaq’s family members repeatedly, adding that if not for COVID-19, they would have struck a compromise by now.

Speaking about Jaan Mohammad saying he is not able to sell his home, Bisada village pradhan Hari Om tells this reporter that he has not heard about this.

"Their homes are locked and here for the last five years. No one goes to that area, but it is all safe and fine," he says disinterestedly. Mahesh interrupts and says over the call, "I told you we are meeting them for a compromise in Dadri right? Once that is taken care of, then we can see what will happen with their homes."

Akhlaq's lawyer, 44-year-old Mohammad Yusuf Saifi, explains the delay in the case. "Charge was submitted within the stipulated time frame by UP Police. However, in these five years, the discharge applications of accused are only being heard. All these are tactics by the accused to save themselves from the real trial, when evidence will come up. They are scared of conviction and therefore keep moving applications. The judge also keeps obliging."

Citing the 2018 Supreme Court guidelines on lynching, Saifi says none of its provisions are being followed. "The guidelines say that a nodal officer, who could be an IPS officer, has to overlook the progress of the case. That has not happened. The case is to be heard in a fast-track court, which, despite happening, we have not been able to take the first step of framing the charges yet. I even gave a copy of the SC guidelines to the Senior Superintendent of Police two years ago, but he did not take any action."

Back in Bisada village, Mahesh and the elders sound optimistic about reaching a compromise. On being told of the Akhlaq family’s intentions of seeing the case go to court, Mahesh says, "Aisa hai, aap batao, ki agar aadmi mar gaya toh vo toh jeevit wapas nahi ho sakta kisi keemat pe bhi. Vo haadsa hogaya. Ye sab karke kya hum use wapas la sakte hai kya? (You tell me, the man has been killed and he cannot be brought back to life come what may. The incident is in the past. By doing all this, is he going to come back?)"

As the accused continue to press for a compromise in the case, Jaan Mohammad takes a pause and says, "What is the guarantee that if we agree to enter a compromise with them, that I, my sons and daughters, my brothers will be safe? I've seen poison in their eyes. Is it not possible, that they end up getting more emboldened by our perceived defeat and try to defame and attack us?"

https://www.thequint.com/amp/story/news/india/dadri-lynching-five-years-mohammad-akhlaq
 
Muslims in India should form their own gangs and start dishing it out to extremist Hindus. There is absolutely no doubt in my mind that these people are not being lynched for smuggling cow meat. That is the reason given, however the real reason is that they are ‘Muslims’. It beggars belief that only ‘Muslim’ drivers are involved in transportation of smuggled beef. You hardly ever hear about a ‘Hindu’ driver being caught and lynched.

The real reason behind these lynching and other violence against Muslims is to scare, intimidate, and subjugate them. If Muslims in India do not retaliate and start sending Bakhts to the pyres then their and their future generations will have a very bleak, if any, future in India.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">"Agar aadmi mar gaya toh vo toh jeevit wapas nahi ho sakta kisi keemat pe bhi. Vo haadsa hogaya": say family of those accused in Akhlaq's lynching. Meanwhile Akhlaq's kin have waited 5 years for the trial to even begin <a href="https://t.co/k968K243UE">https://t.co/k968K243UE</a></p>— Aditya Menon (@AdityaMenon22) <a href="https://twitter.com/AdityaMenon22/status/1310599607248805888?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 28, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
UP’s Anti-Cow Slaughter Law Is Being Misused: Allahabad High Court

Allahabad: The Allahabad high court has raised concerns over misuse of the anti-cow slaughter law in Uttar Pradesh to target innocent people, and the lack of forensic evidence to prove that the recovered meat is beef.

Granting bail to one Rahmuddin who was allegedly involved in cow slaughter, Justice Sidharth in his order said the misuse of the Uttar Pradesh Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act, 1955 has been leading to innocent persons languishing in jail.

“The Act is being misused against innocent persons. Whenever any meat is recovered, it is normally shown as cow meat (beef) without getting it examined or analysed by the forensic laboratory. In most of the cases, meat is not sent for analysis. Accused persons continue to remain in jail for an offence that may not have been committed at all,” the high court order said.

In the order passed on October 19 but made available days later, the high court also observed that there is need to take care of old or non-milking cows which are abandoned by owners, if the law against the slaughter of cows is to be implemented in letter and spirit.

“Goshalas do not accept non-milking cows or old cows and they are left to wander on the roads. In rural areas cattle owners who are unable to feed their livestock, abandon them. They cannot be transported outside the state for fear of locals and police. There are no pastures now. Thus, these animals wander here and there destroying the crops.”

“Whether cows are on roads or on fields their abandonment adversely affects the society in a big way. Some way out has to be found out to keep them either in cow shelters or with the owners, if UP Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act is to be implemented in letter and spirit,” the order said.

Rahmuddin, the petitioner in this case, had said there were no specific allegations against him in the FIR and he was not arrested from the place of the incident. Further, no exercise was done by police to check whether the meat recovered was cow meat or not.

It has been reported in the past too that the Uttar Pradesh government has been taking severe actions against alleged cow slaughter cases, including charging the accused under the National Security Act. Though the NSA was legislated to provide the authorities with the power to detain a person without a charge for up to 12 months if they felt that he or she was a threat to national security or law and order, in Uttar Pradesh the controversial law has been used generously against those accused of cow slaughter.

https://thewire.in/law/uttar-pradesh-cow-slaughter-law-misuse-high-court
 
Allahabad court directing police to use forensics science to determine whether the meat is beef or not is next level laughable material :))
 
NSA against 11 for ‘cow slaughter’ in UP’s Budaun

BAREILLY: The Budaun district authorities have recommended slapping the stringent National Security Act (NSA) on 11 men arrested in connection with alleged cow slaughter. The accused had been held earlier this month but the nod for NSA came on Friday. So far, NSA has been invoked against 23 people in Budaun this year, 21 of them were booked for cow slaughter.

This comes four days after the Allahabad HC expressed concern over misuse of UP’s Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act “against innocent persons”, and questioned the credibility of evidence submitted by police. Budaun falls under Bareilly police range where 38 people have been slapped with this stringent law and stands first in the state in the number of NSA cases. Under the law, an accused can be detained for up to a period of one year, subject to review by a high court every three months.

According to officials, the 11 men – identified as Qaiser Ali, Munawwar, Manne, Zaribul, Aabad, Kasmuddin, Fakruddin, Niyaz Mohammed, Sakruddin, Asluddin and Taufeeq – were arrested while allegedly slaughtering cows in a sugarcane farm near a village in Binawar police station area in Budaun on October 8. The accused, allegedly linked to an illegal meat supply racket, were then produced in a local court and sent to jail, they said. They were booked under IPC’s section 307 (attempt to murder) and sections 3/5/8 of the Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act.

Budaun SSP Sankalp Sharma told TOI, “The accused were running a slaughtering and packaging unit of cow meat in Binawar and opened fire on the police team. Most of them are repeat offenders and have been caught in the past as well. Their act was a threat to communal harmony in the area as it may have ignited violence between two communities. So far, we have invoked NSA against 21 people for cattle slaughter and two for heinous crimes.”

A relative of one of the accused, who wished not to be named said, “Three persons were arrested from their house and later they were shown as accused in an encounter. Police seem to be working on the instructions of politicians.”

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com...ughter-in-ups-budaun/articleshow/78972068.cms
 
there is a simple way to tell if the meat is beef or not. Much cheaper and faster than forensics.
try cooking it, and and having a taste. preferably with some rice and gravy. Dont forget the raita if the spices are too much.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">After 75 days in jail under a cow-slaughter law the state High Court released paddy farmer Rahmuddin on bail, but he fears the police may come for him again<a href="https://t.co/jwOceapq60">https://t.co/jwOceapq60</a></p>— IndianAmericanMuslimCouncil (@IAMCouncil) <a href="https://twitter.com/IAMCouncil/status/1324737054945718272?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 6, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
I guess no need for the vigilantes now?

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Other parties, especially Congress, kept talking for 15 months but didn’t set up even 15 cow shelters. Madhya Pradesh has presented the example of a new tradition before the country, by forming ‘Cow Cabinet’: Madhya Pradesh Home Minister Narottam Mishra <a href="https://t.co/Nv2sF0QI3k">https://t.co/Nv2sF0QI3k</a> <a href="https://t.co/SZtFdm85y9">pic.twitter.com/SZtFdm85y9</a></p>— ANI (@ANI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ANI/status/1328971633818701824?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 18, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
****.


<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A young man from the minority community was bludgeoned to death on the outskirts of Patna on the charge of cattle theft, bringing back the spectre of mob lynching that had stopped in the run-up to the recent Bihar elections. <a href="https://twitter.com/JournoDevRaj?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@JournoDevRaj</a><a href="https://t.co/PE0ujLidie">https://t.co/PE0ujLidie</a></p>— The Telegraph (@ttindia) <a href="https://twitter.com/ttindia/status/1339797790906466307?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 18, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
New laws such as the Anti-Cow Slaughter Bill in Karnataka actually promotes such behaviour.

Bengaluru: "Earlier, life was at risk for vigilantes... not those who were in the (cattle) trade," CN Ashwath Narayan, Deputy Chief Minister of Karnataka told NDTV, in response to concerns that the state's new anti-cow slaughter bill will protect and embolden 'Gau Rakshaks'.
Karnataka's BJP government passed the stringent Karnataka Prevention of Slaughter and Preservation of Cattle Bill, 2020 on Wednesday amid protests in the assembly. Cow slaughter is already banned in the state since the 1960s. The bill expands the definition of "cattle" to include bulls and buffaloes under 13 years of age and hardens the punishment for people involved in any form of cattle slaughter.

Section 17 of the bill shields from legal action "persons acting in good faith". Although it is unclear whether the section can be applied to cow vigilantes, Mr Narayan said that the bill was framed with them mind. "Vigilantes or anyone who is working for a cause and the law of the land should definitely have a scope to work in this provision," he said.

Since 2015, there have been 115 incidents of cattle-related mob violence across the country in which 46 people died and 146 were injured, none of whom were from among the vigilante attackers, according to data compiled by NDTV.

https://www.ndtv.com/karnataka-news...were-at-risk-2337092?pfrom=home-ndtv_bigstory
 
Not just beef-eaters, Karnataka’s anti-cattle slaughter bill will hit farmers, tanners and more

The anti-cow slaughter legislation is likely to have far-reaching adverse economic implications on dairy farmers who are already facing agrarian distress. Industries like leather and hotels are also going to take a huge hit.

Earlier this month, the BJP government in Karnataka passed the controversial Karnataka Prevention of Slaughter and Preservation of Cattle Bill, 2020. The bill, which replaces the less-stringent 1964 cow protection legislation that prohibited slaughter of cows in the state, bans the slaughter of cattle, whose definition it has expanded to include “cow, calf of a cow and bull, bullock and he or she buffalo”. The bill, when implemented, will mean a blanket ban on beef in the southern state.

The anti-cow slaughter legislation, which was passed amid loud protests by the Opposition, does not only have harsh provisions — 3-7 years of jail or/and steep fines up to Rs 5 lakh, and sweeping powers to the police — it is also set to have far-reaching adverse economic implications on dairy farmers who are already facing agrarian distress. Industries like leather and hotels are also going to take a huge hit.

Butchers in Shivajinagar beef market in central Bengaluru, which is one of the largest beef markets in the city, are worried. The market supplies meat across the city, from smaller hotels to star hotels, besides getting hundreds of customers who buy fresh meat every day.

Behind the beef market is a small lane that leads to the office of Beef Merchants’ Association of Karnataka, where Khasim Aijaz Quraishi, the president of the association, is in a meeting with the members. The bill, if implemented, Quraishi told indianexpress.com, will impact the livelihood of more than 40 lakh people in the state who are dependent on beef and related trade.

Quraishi believes this is a politically motivated bill. “The government says they will protect cows, but see the condition of cow shelters. Cows are suffering and dying there.”

The 2020 Bill is a harsher version of a law passed by the BJP in 2010 with ** Yediyurappa as chief minister. It aimed at banning all forms of cattle slaughter by recommending stringent penalties for violators. The bill was shelved in 2013 by the Siddaramaiah-led Congress government after it failed to get the Governor’s assent.

The Congress had then reverted to the Karnataka Prevention of Cow Slaughter and Preservation of Animals Act, 1964, which banned killing of any cow or calf of she-buffalo. It, however, had certain relaxations — like it allowed slaughter of bullock, buffalo-male or female if it was certified by a competent authority to be above the age of 12 years, incapacitated for breeding or deemed sick.

Rushtum Shafiylla, secretary, Beef Merchants’ Association of Karnataka, said: “We follow the 1964 Act and have never indulged in slaughtering cows. Bullocks and buffalos aged above 12 years are slaughtered in the presence of veterinarians deputed by the Animal Husband Department or BBMP local civic body.”

Quraishi also highlighted that beef is consumed by a large number of people from low-income groups for its nutritional value, especially protein. “Beef is poor people’s meat since they cannot afford mutton and chicken. Not just Muslims, a large section of Dalits and Christians consume beef.” According to Quraishi, people from the upper caste community come to Shivanagar market to trade in skin and bones of cattle.

Another butcher, Mumhamad Riaz Ahmad, said that only 30 per cent of those who buy beef from him are Muslims while the rest are from other communities.

Many believe the bill only has political motives and will lead to polarisation. Speaking to indianexpress.com, a vendor in the market, Masood Ahmad, said, “The government’s intention to ban beef is politics. It will fan communal tensions. Poor people like us only know this job and we will lose our livelihood if this act comes into force.”

Demanding a total ban on cow slaughter in the state, the BJP cow protection cell in the state had written to CM Yediyurappa seeking the reintroduction of the 2010 Bill. Meanwhile, days before the winter session began on December 7 in Karnataka’s Vidhana Soudha, Minister for Animal Husbandry Prabhu Chauhan constituted a committee to study similar stringent laws in place in Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh.

Apart from butchers, the small hotel industry, especially in and around the Shivajinagar area, is unlikely to survive the ban. The owner of New Hilal restaurant in Shivajinagar said, “See our hotel menu, most of the dishes are beef-based. There are more than 30 restaurants that are known for beef dishes. What will they serve in case of a beef ban ? More than 100 people, who are working and running hotels in this area, will be on the streets.”

Labelling the anti-cow slaughter bill as “anti-farmer”, the Karnataka Rajya Raitha Sangha president Kodihalli Chandrashekar said: “After a cow or buffalo stops producing milk, farmers usually sell them as it is a burden to maintain unproductive cows. We farmers are ready to look after our cattle but we want the government to introduce an insurance scheme so that when our cattle die we are compensated.” Yediyurappa has said the state would build gaushalas (cow shelters) in all districts to look after ageing cows once the Bill becomes a law.

Opposing the bill, former Karnataka CM HD Kumarawamy had tweeted: “… the Bill forces farmers to nurture them. But it is highly impossible as the hybrid varieties like HF cattle need a minimum of Rs 200 a day for maintenance. This is highly impractical.

Another ancillary trade that is extremely wary is tannery. Shaik Zakeer, who owns a tannery on Tannery Road in Frazer town area, said: “There are around 10 tanneries left in the area after the 1964 Act was introduced. Now. if the government introduces a new bill, they will also shut shop. There is zero doubt about it. Around 50 families may lose their source of earning.”

While tanneries are largely owned by Muslims, the labour consists of Tamil Dalits. “Hides from here are sent to Tamil Nadu leather industry and other parts of the country,” said Zakeer.

The BJP government may promulgate an Ordinance to bring the bill into force after the legislation, which was cleared by the assembly on December 9 , hit a roadblock in the legislative council on the next day. The government had deferred tabling the Bill amid apprehensions that it may be defeated or referred to a select committee on the demand of a combined opposition.

On December 15, the bill was listed to be tabled in the Legislative Council, where the ruling BJP does not enjoy a majority. That was not to be. The Council witnessed high drama with members hurling abuses and the Deputy Chairman being pulled down from his seat over a row pertaining to no-confidence motion. The Council was adjourned sine die within minutes after it met for the day.

Speaking to indianexpress.com, Vinisha Nero, the nominated Anglo-Indian legislator in Karnataka Assembly, said it is not the food habit but the economic fallout of the bill that is the larger concern. “We absolutely do not have an objection to the existing 1964 Act, we respect everybody’s sentiments, but food habits are only a very small part of this bill and for our community. We are more concerned about the farmers and the economic impact on them. Then, what about the wild animals in zoos? Government can’t just snatch away people’s livelihoods.”

“The government has to have a proper discussion and planning before bringing such bills,” she added.

Shaji T. Verghese, president of Christian Seva Sangha in Bengaluru, said the beef ban will lead to black marketing. “In middle and lower-middle class Christian community, beef is a staple food. We don’t consume cow which gives milk, the buffalo and bull are food crop and it is a common food in the community.”

Experts have also voiced concerns regarding the bill, saying if the bill is implemented, there will be huge crises in the agrarian economy of the state. Prakash Kammardi, former chairman, Karnataka Agricultural Prices Commission, and retired professor of Agricultural Economics from the University of Agricultural Sciences, Bengaluru, said: “Farmers will be most affected since they are the primary stakeholders. They can’t keep the cow or buffalo when it becomes unproductive, and if the government forces them to keep unproductive cattle, they can’t invest in new ones for dairy products or for farming. This will make other secondary stakeholders, like butchers and people from the leather industry or people who depend on products of cattle. They all come under agrarian economy as the base of these industries are cattle. Those employed in each of these industries will suffer acutely.”

https://indianexpress.com/article/i...ll-will-hit-farmers-tanners-and-more-7111398/
 
As someone stated, “Maa maa boltay ho, aur jab marr jaati hai tou kutton k aagey daal deytay ho”.
What an extreme hypocrisy!
 
Seems like these have gone to zero in corona times unless they just don’t make mainstream news anymore
 
Seems like these have gone to zero in corona times unless they just don’t make mainstream news anymore

Oops seems like I spoke too soon. Probably just stopped getting shocked because it’s not unbelievable “wow” type news anymore and is a regular thing. Saw December itself has had an incident after having skimmed this thread
 
https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/mp-irked-by-stray-cattle-locals-drive-hundreds-of-cows-into-civic-bodys-compound-in-bhind-2702472#pfrom=home-ndtv_topstories

Angered by the menace of stray cattle, residents of a town in Madhya Pradesh's Bhind district drove hundreds of cows into the grounds of a local civic body, an official said on Tuesday.
Residents and farmers of Akoda town drove about 700 to 800 cows into Akoda Nagar Parishad's compound on Monday and locked them, chief municipal officer (CMO) Rambhan Singh Bhadoria said.

Residents have claimed that the stray cattle had been destroying their crops, and were angry that they were not being sent to a gaushala (cow shelter), he said.

A cow shelter had already been built, but it has not been handed over to the civic body, he said.

The cows were still in the compound and 20 quintals of fodder had been arranged for them, the official said, adding that he will be meeting the district collector on Wednesday to inform him about the problem.

Meanwhile, a video of the farmers and residents protesting has also surfaced on social media.
 
Patna: A disturbing video of a young Muslim man in Bihar being harassed by self-professed cow vigilantes has caused a stir on social media after local media reported that he was allegedly beaten to death and his body buried in a ditch. Some reports claim the assailants tried to burn the body by dousing it with petrol and setting it on fire. They then allegedly sprayed salt on his body and buried it so that it would decay faster.

In the video, Mohammad Khaleel Alam, a Janata Dal (United) party member from Samastipur district can be seen pleading to his attackers with folded hands to spare him. The assailants, not visible in the video footage, can be heard forcing the victim to disclose the locations where cows are slaughtered and name the people involved in selling beef.

They ask him how much beef he has consumed in his life and if he fed it to his children as well. They questioned him on whether the Quran instructs him to consume beef, to which he replies that it doesn't.

The video, loaded with hate speech and expletives, has been circulated widely as another incident of hate crime against Muslims. The local police, however, deny the allegation and claim it's a diversionary tactic to cover up a murder.

NDTV cannot independently verify the authenticity of the video.

Bihar's Leader of Opposition Tejashwi Yadav tweeted a Hindi news clipping of the incident late last night and attacked Chief Minister Nitish Kumar.

"Law and order have completely disappeared under Bihar's NDA government. A Muslim youth who was himself a leader of the JD(U) was beaten, burnt alive and buried. Nitish Kumar should tell us why such incidents keep happening in Bihar. Why are people taking the law into their own hands?" he tweeted in Hindi.

Mr Khaleel's dead body was recovered from the bank of the Burhi Gandak river on Friday evening, four days after his family lodged a missing person's report.

According to local police, the victim's family members filed a report on February 16. For the next few days, they kept receiving calls from the victim's mobile number asking for money. The caller claimed that he had borrowed ₹ 5 lakh and threatened to sell his kidney if the family delayed the payment.

On February 19, his body was recovered from the river bank where it was buried in the sand. However, on Tuesday, the local police received a video where he is being asked about his role in cattle smuggling.

The police have claimed that this video was recorded just to divert attention and give a communal colour to the murder.

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/mus...-vigilantes-2784257#pfrom=home-ndtv_topscroll
 
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