Sunday Star-Times

Ban on selling cattle seen as sop to Hindu hardliners

- Washington Post LA Times

The Indian government has issued a nationwide ban on selling cattle for slaughter, the toughest measure yet imposed to protect cows, an animal that conservati­ve Hindus regard as sacred.

The government has ordered that no cows or buffaloes can be traded at a livestock market without a signed declaratio­n by the owner that the animal is not being sold for slaughter. Anyone buying livestock will have to present a document showing that he or she is an ‘‘agricultur­alist’’.

The rules are part of a tough new law against animal cruelty, but commentato­rs say they are aimed at placating hardline Hindu supporters of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s nationalis­t government.

Hindus form an overwhelmi­ng majority among India’s 1.3 billion people, and many of them eschew beef out of respect for the bovine.

But beef, which is cheaper in India than many other sources of protein, is a major part of the diet of Muslims, Christians, and Hindus from the lowest rung of the ancient caste system, known as Dalits, or ‘‘untouchabl­es’’.

The leader of the southern state of Kerala, which has a large Christian population, criticised the move as ‘‘fascist’’ and a ‘‘clear attack on our plurality’’.

Pinarayi Vijayan, the state’s chief minister, tweeted that the law would rob hundreds of thousands of people of jobs, cripple leather industry, and affect diets of millions of people.

The rules build on legislatio­n passed in several states, most led by Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, to ban the slaughter of cattle. The laws have stoked violence by Hindu vigilante groups, which have attacked Muslims and others on suspicion of smuggling cattle or possessing beef.

India’s environmen­t minister, Harsh Vardhan, said the new rules applied only to sales at livestock markets, and that cattle bought and sold directly from farms would not be affected.

But the meat trade in India, a US$4 billion industry, is centred on animal markets and is dominated by Muslims and Dalits, who would the the be most affected by the change.

In the western state of Maharashtr­a, where a government led by Modi’s party banned the slaughter of cows in 2015, thousands of butchers have lost their jobs and many meat shops have closed.

In the city of Aurangabad, Mohammad Qureshi – part of a Muslim community that has traditiona­lly slaughtere­d cattle and sold the meat for export – said his family’s beef business had dwindled. The company had survived because the state’s ban did not include buffalo meat, but now buffalo cannot be sold at markets for slaughter either.

‘‘What are we supposed to do?’’ Qureshi said. ‘‘I have a family to look after, and this shop is all I have. By imposing these rules, the government is making for minorities.’’

The nationwide rules would also prevent farmers from selling ageing and unproducti­ve cattle to be slaughtere­d, which many farmers have typically done to raise money and avoid the expense of maintainin­g an unproducti­ve animal.

Many observers criticised the government for imposing new layers of bureaucrac­y and paperwork on cattle traders, many of whom are poor and uneducated. Anyone seeking to sell cattle at a market will need to furnish identifica­tion documents – both for himself and the animal – creating what one commentato­r called ‘‘a cow bureaucrac­y in the 21st century’’. lives difficult

 ?? REUTERS ?? State laws in India banning the slaughter of cattle have stoked violence by Hindu vigilante groups, which have attacked Muslims and others on suspicion of smuggling cattle or possessing beef.
REUTERS State laws in India banning the slaughter of cattle have stoked violence by Hindu vigilante groups, which have attacked Muslims and others on suspicion of smuggling cattle or possessing beef.

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