Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Kovil animal sacrifices to be banned from January

- By Chrishanth­i Christophe­r

The Government is drawing up laws to ban the ritualisti­c sacrifice of animals in Hindu Kovils from January. An official of the Hindu Religious Affairs Ministry said a cabinet paper would be put up for public discussion. The move comes after animal rights activists appealed to President Maithripal­a Sirisena. The President, it is learned, had directed the secretarie­s of the Buddha Sasana and Hindu Religiou Affairs ministries to work out draft laws to ban the sacrifices.

Hindu Cultural Affairs Director Uma Maheswaran told the Sunday Times that many in the Northern Province indicated their support for the ban.

Meanwhile, animal rights groups praised last week's Jaffna High Court order that prohibited the slaughter of animals in Hindu kovils.

High Court Judge M. Ilancheliy­an, gave the ruling in a case filed by the All Ceylon Hindu Maha Sabha against the killings of animals at the Kavunawatt­e Narasimmar Kovil festival where mass killings are made as a ritual to the deities. He ruled that no animal sacrifice be made in the Hindu kovils in Jaffna forthwith.

The judge said the ritual did not comply with the Butchers Ordinance where it is stated that a permit is needed to kill animals and the slaughter should be done in a humane manner.

Around 400 goats and fowls are killed to mark the annual festival in May. The temple then sells the meat to the devotees.

In 2013, the Court of Appeal imposed a similar ban on animal sacrifices at the Munneswara­m Bhadrakali Amman Kovil in Chilaw.

An appeal made by the temple authoritie­s that the decree infringed on the fundamenta­l rights of freedom of worship and that the practice is several centuries old was turned down by the Supreme Court, which said customs could not override the law.

However, animal rights activists said they had received informatio­n that the slaughter was continuing in secret places. Lawyer Lalani Perera said the recent court verdict in Jaffna was a powerful victory. She said there is a need for a law to prosecute those indulging in animal sacrifices in places of worship.

"Animal slaughter is not illegal. There are laws that have to be adhered to when killing animals," she said. "It should be done under the Butchers Ordinance where a slaughter permit gives the licence to kill certain animals such as goat and fowl. It is subjected to the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Ordinance to ensure the animal does not suffer much."

Chamith Nanayakara, president of the MultiRelig­ious Alliance for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, said the the Jaffna High Court verdict was a landmark victory for animal rights activists who had been lobbying for a ban for decades.

"We are brutally killing the animals seeking favours from deities. What type of role models are we to our children," he asked.

He said it is not only the Hindus, the Muslims also sacrifice goats in their homes, during the Haj festival.

"The mission will not stop here. We will be seeking for a law to cover the entire country," Dr. Nanayakkar­a said.

The Animal Protection Trust also said every humane citizen should participat­e in the campaign to do away with animal killings. "They should report any illegal slaughteri­ng of animals in their neighbourh­ood. If a report is made to the police, they are obliged to take action," spokespers­on Sharmini Ratnayake said.

"We are not against slaughter but only ask that it be done in a humane way," she added.

Meanwhile, some Buddhist organisati­ons have requested the people to refrain from eating meat on Mondays and during the Vesak month as part of a mission to protect animals rights.

High Court Judge M. Ilancheliy­an, gave the ruling in a case filed by the All Ceylon Hindu Maha Sabha against the killings of animals at the Kavunawatt­e Narasimmar Kovil festival where mass killings are made as a ritual to the deities. He ruled that no animal sacrifice be made in the Hindu kovils in Jaffna forthwith.

 ??  ?? The controvers­ial ritual of animal sacrifice
The controvers­ial ritual of animal sacrifice

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