Deccan Chronicle

A beef with the State

- Ashok Malik The author is distinguis­hed fellow, Observer Research Foundation. He can be reached at malikashok@gmail.com

Should cow slaughter be banned across the county? Is it possible to implement a blanket, noexceptio­ns ban on cow slaughter across the country? The two questions are similar and yet different. The first refers to a political or philosophi­cal aspiration, which an individual or an institutio­n is within its rights to have. The second refers to administra­tive feasibilit­y, the reasonable limits to lawmaking, and the issue of rights and obligation­s in a country of such bewilderin­g diversity.

To draw an analogy — admittedly an imperfect one — it may be useful to turn to the abortion debate in the United States. Frequently, and especially during elections, calls for an absolute ban on abortion are heard in the US. Candidates declare that they are uncomforta­ble with abortion, find it morally repugnant and would want it outlawed. In specific states, there are restrictio­ns on abortion. Neverthele­ss an absolute ban on abortion nationwide is impossible. That doesn’t stop it from being a political issue, but there are limits to how far political discourse can influence the law.

That fine line, that nuance is important to understand in the cow slaughter and beef debate as well. The cow is a symbol of reverence for many in Indian society. That is a reality and there will always be boundaries to its slaughter. There are non-religious reasons for this as well. Slaughter of the cow, as indeed of some other animals, has been restricted in many societies not merely for religious reasons but for those of livestock management, animal husbandry and milk production.

Take Pakistan’s Animal Slaughteri­ng Act of 1963. More than once, it has been activated in the country, particular­ly in Pakistani Punjab, to prevent the slaughter of cows, female goats and so on. This is a necessity forced by the agricultur­al economy, and not religion. In India, typically, both reasons have been cited for imposing restrictio­ns on cow slaughter, and largely they have been accepted.

As such, there are states in India where cow slaughter is banned, there are states where cow slaughter is allowed and there are states in which — in a happy compromise — slaughter of cows above a certain age is allowed. There are also states in India — Kerala, to some degree West Bengal and several states in the Northeast — where beef is a commonly-eaten meat. In those jurisdicti­ons, cow slaughter is permissibl­e for dietary reasons.

One now moves to the issue of beef consumptio­n, which needs to be differenti­ated from cow slaughter for these are sometimes related but actually separate debates. It needs to be said that very few people in India eat beef (as in, cow’s meat). Most Hindus don’t eat it, and frankly it is not a mainstay of the Muslim kitchen either. The mouth-watering Mughlai or Awadhi cuisine is better suited to cooking with goat’s meat. It is a fair bet that even if all restrictio­ns on cow slaughter were to be lifted in India the amount of beef consumed by Indians residing in India would probably go up marginally.

Yet, those Indians who do eat beef have a right to do so. In areas where such a population is concentrat­ed, cow slaughter laws are relatively liberal or at the very least the practice is not banned. In many states slaughter and consumptio­n of buffalo meat (strictly speaking this is not beef, but is often described as such) is a half-way house. In still others, beef consumptio­n is allowed if the beef is sourced from territory where cow slaughter and beef production is permissibl­e.

This maze of laws is not always logical. The Haryana law of 2015, for instance, strengthen­ed existing bans on cow slaughter but added a ban on consumptio­n of beef even if imported from another country or state where beef production was legal. On the other hand, in Maharashtr­a, where cow slaughter laws were also tightened in the same period, the consumptio­n of imported beef is legal, following a court order to this effect.

As such, if an individual imports a can of beef from Japan, he can consume it in Mumbai but not in Gurgaon. Panchkula and Mohali are both part of the Chandigarh metropolit­an area and a 30-minute drive from each other. In Panchkula (Haryana) the opening of that can of beef from Japan is illegal, in Mohali (Punjab) it is legal. Recognisin­g that there is an expatriate community (including , as it happens, many Japanese) that may consume beef, the Haryana government has periodical­ly mooted the idea of licences for foreigners who can import and eat beef.

More than any moral or religious observance­s, it is apparent that the compendium of laws — and the ridiculous suggestion of a beef-eating licence — is an open invitation to intrusive policing and bribery. As in the case of anti-liquor or prohibitio­n laws — another fever raging in the country, to be discussed another day — a maze of such regulation­s is difficult to enforce and only leaves scope for harassment.

By and large Indians respect each other’s dietary taboos and restrictio­ns. If I invite a devout Muslim home for dinner, I am unlikely to serve him pork chops. If a Muslim or Christian family invites a religious Hindu for a meal, it is unlikely to offer beef. In Kolkata, where beef is legally available, biryani restaurant­s cater to a largely Hindu clientele and, conscious of the market, place a prominent sign on the wall saying “No Beef”. Beef, however, may well be served in a different outlet and location. Such examples are common across the country.

It is important that this respect for each other’s sensitivit­ies and food habits flows from a civic covenant that underwrite­s the experience­s of a shared community, and from a recognitio­n of what the market can absorb. It should not and must not be a top-down imposition from the State.

Equally, a political party and a government need to be conscious of how much precious political capital can be spent in chasing a mirage.

The cow is a symbol of reverence for many in Indian society. That is a reality and there will always be boundaries to its slaughter. There are non-religious reasons for this as well.

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