Khaleej Times

Five beaten, arrested over buffalo killing

- AFP

P 20

new delhi — Indian police Friday arrested five men for “animal cruelty” after they were caught skinning a buffalo and beaten on suspicion of killing a cow, an animal considered sacred by Hindus.

The mob bashing in Uttar Pradesh state is just the latest such attack by vigilantes in India, where there has been a spate of assaults and murders in recent months of accused cow killers.

Police said a mob raided a dairy farm in Aligrah where they found five low-caste men skinning a buffalo, an animal not considered sacred and whose slaughter is legal at permitted abattoirs.

The men claimed the animal had died of natural causes and the dairy owner had requested they remove the hide, but the mob alleged it was a cow they had slaughtere­d and set upon them.

Local police chief Rajesh Kumar Pandey said an investigat­ion would determine how the buffalo died, and the skinners would be held for questionin­g. “They have been arrested on charges of animal cruelty, and further charges will depend on the outcome of the autopsy report,” Pandey said.

None of the attackers — all high-caste people — had been arrested as police had not received a formal complaint from the victims, he added.

Footage of the incident aired by local broadcaste­rs showed the attackers punching and kicking a man while he was being taken away by police. The five men were Dalits, whose status at the bottom of the caste system designates them to skinning cows, a major source of hides for India’s booming leatherwor­k industry.

Last year four Dalits were stripped and beaten in Gujarat state by vigilantes for skinning a dead cow.

The low-caste community refused to clear carcasses from the streets for months in protest.

Cow slaughter, and the possession or consumptio­n of beef, is prohibited in most Indian states, with some carrying life imprisonme­nt for infringeme­nts.

Buffalo is widely consumed in India, particular­ly by Muslims and Dalits, and India is the world’s leading exporter of buffalo meat, known as carabeef.

But the Muslim-dominated slaughter industry has long been viewed with suspicion by rightwing hardliners, who suspect cows are killed in secret.

There was a crackdown on the slaughter industry in India’s main meat producing state of Uttar Pradesh after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party won power there in March.

Violence against people accused of killing the cow has spiked in recent months. Two Muslims were beaten to death this week on suspicion of stealing cows while another was killed by vigilantes for transporti­ng dairy cattle by road last month. —

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