Arab Times

Dead cows left, Dalits strike:

- The mother of a Pakistani celebrity murdered in a so-called ‘honour’ killing said her son strangled his sister after being taunted by his friends over her behaviour. The death earlier this month of starlet Qandeel Baloch, who shot to fame for her provoca

Hundreds of dead cattle have been left rotting in western India after members of the lowest Dalit social caste refused to dispose of them in protest at a vicious attack, a rights group said Thursday.

The group, in Gujarat state, has called a mass rally to protest the treatment of low-caste workers, often tasked with unsavoury jobs including the disposal of dead cows.

Cows are considered sacred by Hindus and they are left to roam freely through the streets of India.

Around 10,000 people are expected to attend the rally on Sunday in Gujarat’s main city of Ahmedabad, said Kirit Rathod, a spokesman for Dalit Adhikar Manch.

“Since Dalits have stopped disposing of the cattle carcasses in nearly half a dozen districts, approximat­ely 500 (dead) cattle are lying unattended across various towns and villages of Gujarat,” Rathod said.

Another representa­tive of the group, Jignesh Mewani, told AFP that “at least 500 families of 19 villages and towns” across Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home state had stopped work.

The strike comes after four Dalits were stripped half-naked, tied to a car and thrashed by cow protection vigilantes on July 11 over suspicions they had killed one of the animals.

Cow slaughter and the consumptio­n of beef are banned in Gujarat and several other states in officially secular India.

Two more Dalits were beaten after they tried to save the four, while a police officer was killed days later when violence broke out at a rally in protest at the attack.

Police, who say the Dalits had been taking the cow to be skinned after it died naturally, have made 20 arrests over the

attack. (AFP)

Halt execution:

The sister of a Pakistani convicted of drug crimes has appealed the Indonesian government to spare the life Indian children sit on the roof of a home submerged in flood waters in Batahidia on the Brahmaputr­a River in South Kamrup, southwest of Guwahati, on July 27. Hundreds of thousands of people have been affected by flooding brought

on by heavy monsoon rains in India’s northeaste­rn region. (AFP)

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