Khaleej Times

Crackdown creates meat shortage in UP

- Biswajeet Banerjee AP

lucknow — India’s most populous state is running out of meat.

After the Hindu right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party came to power in Uttar Pradesh this month on the back of a resounding electoral victory and named a Hindu priest-cum-politician as the state’s chief minister, the government began cracking down on illegal slaughterh­ouses and meat shops.

The new chief minister, Yogi Adityanath, is a strong supporter of laws protecting cows, which are revered by devout Hindus, and has publicly opposed beef consumptio­n. The slaughter of cows and the consumptio­n of beef are taboo for most Hindus. Their slaughter is barred by law in most Indian states, including Uttar Pradesh.

“All the illegal operations in slaughterh­ouses should end now,” Adityanath said on Sunday at a rally in his hometown of Gorakhpur, where he is also the high priest of the Gorakhnath Math, a religious order based in eastern Uttar Pradesh. “The majority of the slaughterh­ouses and meat shops are running without licenses and government approval. I know in the name of buffalo, cows are being slaughtere­d in many abattoirs. This should end.”

Govt earns Rs100b a year

So far, there have been no reports that any of the slaughterh­ouses shut down were selling cow meat instead of the usual water buffalo meat, which is permitted.

As government officials shut down slaughterh­ouses and meat shops operating without licenses or adequate paperwork, tens of thousands of meat sellers across the state have closed in protest, adding to the meat shortages.

Uttar Pradesh, with a population of 204 million, is India’s largest meat-producing state and has 41 licensed slaughterh­ouses. Many more operate illegally by bribing local authoritie­s, like thousands of small businesses in this corruption-plagued country. Uttar Pradesh’s government earns more than 110 billion rupees a year from the industry.

“We know it is a money spinner industry for the government, but the party had promised to people in its election campaign to close down illegal slaughterh­ouses and meat shops,” said Vijay Bahadur Pathak, the Bharatiya Janata Party’s state general secretary. “Money or no money, we will fulfill our poll promise.”

Aquil Ahmad, a meat shop owner in Lucknow, the state capital, said that even though he has a license, he has decided to close his shop in support of others in his fraternity.

‘At the mercy of clerks’

Meanwhile, many meat shop owners are struggling to obtain the requisite paperwork.

Niaz Quereshi, an official with Quereshi Mahasabha, an associatio­n of meat sellers, called the government crackdown “unjustifie­d”. He said government officials were harassing people trying to get licenses and were asking for bribes. “We are being sent from one table to another and from one room to another by clerks,” he said. “They are harassing us.”

Restaurant­s suffer

As meat has disappeare­d from the markets, many restaurant­s have been forced to shut down or change the menu.

Tundey Kababi, a 105-year-old kabab institutio­n in Lucknow known for its delicately spiced buffalo meat fare, has had to pull its top-selling item from the menu. “We are not getting an adequate supply of buffalo meat because of the crackdown on slaughterh­ouses,” said Tundey Kababi’s owner, Raees Ahmad. “We are forced to sell kababs made of chicken and mutton. Our customers are not happy, but we have no other option.”

‘Zoo lions don’t like goat meat’

The crackdown has even hit the carnivores in the state’s zoos.

Zoos in Lucknow and the neighbouri­ng city of Kanpur have sent an urgent message to the state government saying the lions aren’t keen on eating goat meat. “Now we serve goat meat, but the animals are not eating it to their fill,” said Dr Nasim Zaidi, a veterinari­an at a state-run hospital.

The government has received similar complaints from a lion safari park in Etawah that is home to three grown lions and two cubs.

“Initially the lions were fed goat and chicken meat, but I am told that they are not relishing that,” said Dara Singh Chauhan, Uttar Pradesh’s minister for forests. “Arrangemen­ts have been made to transport buffalo meat from other areas of the state.” —

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