Cape Argus

Mob kills men over cow theft

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GAUHATI (AP): Two Muslim men were beaten to death by a mob in north-eastern India over allegation­s of cow theft, the latest in a series of similar attacks across the country, police officials said yesterday.

Senior Assam state police official Mukesh Aggarwal said police had filed a criminal complaint and were trying to identify the members of the mob, but no arrests had been made so far.

The attack took place on Sunday in a village east of the state capital, Gauhati, when a mob accused the two men of trying to steal cows and began beating them with sticks and rocks.

Police in the district said by the time they arrived, the men were in critical condition, and were declared dead at a hospital.

This is the third cow-related death in the country in the past month. On April 1, Pehlu Khan, a Muslim cattle trader, was lynched by a mob in the western state of Rajasthan as he transporte­d cattle he had bought at an animal fair back to his home state of Haryana. Khan and his family were small dairy farmers.

The rise in cow-related lynchings and beatings began after the ruling Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party was voted to power in a landslide victory in 2014. Most attacks have been attributed to local Hindu radical groups.

Human Rights Watch said last week that since Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government took office, at least 10 Muslims, including a 12-year-old boy, had been killed in mob attacks in seven separate incidents related to allegation­s over cows.

Hindus, who form 80% of India’s 1.3 billion people, consider cows to be sacred, and for many, eating beef is taboo.

In many Indian states, the slaughteri­ng of cows and selling of beef is restricted or banned.

Over the past two years vigilante groups, who call themselves cow protectors, have become active in small towns and cities across India. Even lower caste Hindus, who usually carry out undesirabl­e tasks such as skinning dead cattle, have faced mob violence.

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