Business Standard

Mamata says won’t accept ban on cattle sale for slaughter

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

The raging row over ban on sale of cattle for slaughter at animal markets kept the political pot on the boil on Monday, with West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee declaring her government will not accept it.

She called the ban imposed by the Modi government “undemocrat­ic and unconstitu­tional”, and said it would be challenged legally.

Protests were organised in several parts of Tamil Nadu Kerala. Tamil Nadu's main opposition DMK has planned a protest on May 31.

Meanwhile, three Youth Congress workers, including its Kannur district president were on Monday suspended by the party for slaughteri­ng a calf in public after its video went viral on social media and triggered outrage, in an apparent damage control exercise.

“It is a deliberate attempt to encroach on the state’s powers. It is undemocrat­ic, unconstitu­tional and unethical. It is also an attempt to destroy the federal structure of the country,” Banerjee told journalist­s in Kolkata.

“We are not accepting the ban. We will challenge it legally. We will consult the state's Advocate General on this matter. I will request the Centre not to interfere with the state’s matter and destroy the federal structure,” Banerjee said.

Protests were held in several parts of Tamil Nadu, including Madurai, Coimbatore, Erode and Hosur. Several activists of a little known pro-Tamil outfit were detained in Madurai where they had organised a beef eating contest.

A group of students at IIT, Madras, held a ‘beef-fest’ on their campus last night.

Raising the pitch on the issue, opposition parties urged the AIADMK government to enact a law against the ban.

DMK slammed the E K Palaniswam­i government MAMATA BANERJEE West Bengal chief minister for “keeping mum” on the matter when neighbouri­ng Kerala and Karnataka had vehemently opposed the ban.

DMK working president M K Stalin will lead a protest on May 31 in Chennai against the ban, the party said, adding “the fundamenta­l right to choice of food granted by the Constituti­on has been snatched away”.

The Congress-led UDF observed a ‘black day’ in various parts of Kerala and took out protest marches. The ruling CPI (M) said it would organise ‘evening dharnas’ in 2000 places across the state on June 2.

The protests will be held from 4 PM in public places in panchayats, municipali­ties and corporatio­n areas, CPI(M) state secretaria­t said in a press release.

The new rules were part of centre's move to implement the RSS agenda, it said. Meanwhile, three Youth Congress workers--Kannur YC district president Rijil Makkutty and activists Joshi Kandathil and Sharafuddi­n--were suspended and the party distanced itself from the incident in which a calf was slaughtere­d in full public view.

Kerala BJP president Kummanam Rajasekhar­an had posted the video of the incident on twitter, calling it “cruelty at its peak”.

Later, police registered a case for slaughteri­ng a calf in public during 'beef fests' organised across Kerala by the Congress and the Left on Sunday to protest the Centre's ban.

The AICC in-charge of communicat­ions, Randeep Surjewala, said such action by Congress workers was “completely unacceptab­le” and “alien to civil society, our culture and founding principles”.

“Anybody who has done so will have no place in the party and that's why the workers have been already suspended by the Youth Congress,” he said in New Delhi.

"Such elements have no place in the Congress or in our culture. Indian culture is not to cause harm to any living being, much less to the holy cow which we all celebrate and revere," he said, in an apparent attempt to contain the adverse fallout of the incident.

Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi had yesterday termed the incident "thoughtles­s and barbaric".

The BJP denounced the Kerala incident as "shameful" and "provocativ­e".

"This is shameful and in many ways provocativ­e. Political opposition happens but it is unfortunat­e that such an act has been committed happened, that too by youth Congress workers.

It is unfortunat­e," Union minister Ravi Shankar Prasad told reporters in New Delhi.

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath questioned the "silence" of secular parties on the Kerala incident.

 ??  ?? “TIt is a deliberate attempt to encroach on the state's powers. It is undemocrat­ic, unconstitu­tional and unethical. We are not accepting the ban. We will challenge it legally”
“TIt is a deliberate attempt to encroach on the state's powers. It is undemocrat­ic, unconstitu­tional and unethical. We are not accepting the ban. We will challenge it legally”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India