The Asian Age

Stamp out cow vigilantis­m

-

The Supreme Court has given sage advice to government­s on cow vigilantis­m. It asked every state to appoint a senior police official in each district to stop the vigilantes from violence in the name protecting cows.

The vigilantes must be brought to book promptly, the court said, with the Chief Justice also voicing concern and pointing out that a mechanism should be in place to arrest this deeply divisive mania. Cow vigilantis­m has spread disaffecti­on and caused deaths too by lynching, which has no place in any civilised society. The ongoing litigation against the despicable practice also reminds us the Centre can’t abdicate its constituti­onal responsibi­lity to instruct the states to take steps to save innocent lives from mob fury.

The Prime Minister has spoken in no uncertain terms on stopping violence in the cow’s name. The animal may have been revered for centuries, but there’s just no place for the depravity of indiscrimi­nate attacks against those transporti­ng cows due to misplaced confidence about the attackers being backed by false notions of the strength of majoritari­anism. The zealots don’t seem to care about the damage done to social harmony by these brazen acts. They may feel encouraged in the current environmen­t. The number of vigilante events, said to be 66 by one count, is a clear pointer to the frenzy fed also by videos of such violence being aired on the social media by mischievou­s elements. A court-directed system of accountabi­lity in law enforcemen­t must be backed by government­s walking the talk after condemning cow vigilantis­m.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India