Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Vigilantis­m wrong, ban cow slaughter all over: Bhagwat

- Saubhadra Chatterji

NEWDELHI: Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) chief Mohan Bhagwat on Sunday condemned the violence by self-styled cow protection groups even as he pushed for a law for a countrywid­e ban on cow slaughter.

Bhagwat’s statement came at an event to observe the birth anniversar­y of Lord Mahavir, days after the lynching of a Muslim dairy farmer by gau rakshaks in Rajasthan sparked a nationwide row.

Bhagwat said that violence by cow protectors “defames” the efforts of cow protection. “Nothing should be done while protecting cows that hurts the belief of some people. Nothing should be done that is violent. It only defames the efforts of cow protectors,” Bhagwat said.

The RSS chief also called cow slaughter a “vice that must be curbed” and demanded that a law is needed to ban cow slaughter across India.

The remarks assume significan­ce after a section of the Opposition parties tried to highlight the difference in BJP’s approach in the cow belt vis-àvis the north east where it has state government­s.

He expressed hope that in other state government­s -- possibly referring to the BJP-ruled Arunachal Pradesh -- will follow suit by dealing with “local complexiti­es”. “I am confident that wherever RSS workers are in power, they will deal with local complexiti­es and work in that direction,” he said.

Bhagwat maintained that he wants more people on the vigil to protect cows even as he didn’t prefer violence. “They should be completely obeying the law and the Constituti­on,” Bhagwat said about cow protection groups.

“It’s a sane statement. Good sense should prevail,” said BJD leader Bhartruhar­i Mahtab.

Bhagwat’s condemnati­on of violence comes at a time when the Opposition parties have once again targeted the BJP over rising atrocities against minorities in the name of cow vigilantis­m. The issue had snowballed into a major controvers­y after a dairy farmer, Pehlu Khan, who had purchased a cow from the cattle market on April 1 in Jaipur was mercilessl­y attacked by gau rakshaks in Alwar on his way home. A law banning cow slaughter, Bhagwat suggested, will promote non-violence. “There cannot be a law that says you do violence.”

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