Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

India’s beef boom under attack

Vigilantes, government­s try to stop slaughter of cattle

- SWANSY AFONSO AND PRABHUDATT­A MISHRA BLOOMBERG NEWS

As a centuries-old dispute over beef intensifie­s in India, cattle transporte­r Shafiullah Mohammad Sharif Shah is caught in the middle.

Hindu vigilantes set fire to one of Shah’s trucks in December as it carried six water buffalo to a government­owned slaughterh­ouse outside Mumbai, he said. They beat up the driver and set the animals free.

With such attacks becoming common, business has slowed so much that Shah says his five trucks may be repossesse­d if he can’t make a monthly loan payment of $2,390.

While India is dominated by 1 billion Hindus, who revere dairy cows as sacred and hold vegetarian­ism as an ideal, some states still allow them to be slaughtere­d for meat, and output has surged from buffalo that have little religious significan­ce. Annual beef exports are the world’s second-largest, jumping 11-fold in a decade to $4.35 billion. During the past year, hard-line Hindu groups have stepped up efforts to end cow slaughter and combat a network of small, illegal plants that produce cattle meat for domestic use.

“The atmosphere in the abattoir is very tense,” said Shah, 38. “We’re being harassed everywhere, and the attacks are worsening. The industry doesn’t know how to deal with this, and everyone from transporte­rs to dealers and farmers is scared.”

Vigilantes haven’t made any distinctio­n between buffalo and dairy cows, targeting transporte­rs of both. Trucks carrying cattle are often blocked by the activists, who snatch drivers’ phones, beat them up and hand over the cattle to animal welfare centers, according to the All Maharashtr­a Cattle Merchants Associatio­n.

Attacks have increased since the May election of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, whose Hindu-backed Bharatiya Janata Party favors tighter restrictio­ns on cow slaughteri­ng, which is legal in five of India’s 29 states.

“Our demand is to ban cow slaughter in India,” Surendra Kumar Jain, joint general secretary of Vishva Hindu Parishad, a religious group affiliated with BJP, said Feb. 25 by phone from Rohtak in northern Haryana state.

Maharashtr­a, the secondmost populous state with 112 million people and home to the nation’s biggest city, Mumbai, on March 2 banned the possession and sale of beef. The meat that previously was legal in restaurant­s and sidewalk food stalls now carries a maximum punishment of five years in prison and threatens to fan tensions between Hindus and minority Christians and Muslims.

Devendra Fadnavis, the chief minister of Maharashtr­a, did not respond to two calls made Tuesday to his mobile and office phones, seeking comment on the attacks.

Supporters of Modi, including right-wing Hindu groups Bajrang Dal and Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh, have called for a national beef ban and activists have targeted legal businesses to disrupt production. While the organizati­ons aren’t seeking to halt buffalo slaughter, they are promoting vegetarian­ism and an end to buffalo-meat exports, arguing the industry uses valuable water and land.

In the past 10 months, about 600 incidents of harassment were recorded in Maharashtr­a, the third-largest producer of buffalo beef, compared with 200 to 300 cases annually in the previous five years, Qureshi said in an interview on Feb. 27. The numbers are probably higher, he said, because traders and transporte­rs often don’t report the attacks to the associatio­n.

The growing no-beef agenda threatens to disrupt an industry that expanded under secular government­s that promoted agricultur­e in India, which saw farm exports grow faster than any other nation over the past decade. The country is the world’s largest democracy, which includes an estimated 176 million Muslims, more than any country except Indonesia.

While beef and pork are taboo at many Indian eateries, including McDonald’s Corp. and Burger King outlets, some restaurant­s serve beef and others offer it off the menu. The meat is cheaper than pork or chicken, so it is a popular source of protein for the poor.

The country ranks sixth in the world among beef consumers, and demand is up 4.2 percent in the past five years. Much of the industry’s growth has been in exports to Vietnam, China and Africa. Shipments will total 1.95 million tons this year, more than triple what was exported a decade earlier, the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e estimated in an October report. Only Brazil sells more overseas.

The campaign to halt all cow slaughter and limit buffalo-meat exports is for the good of the country and isn’t targeting Muslims or Christians, said Vishva Hindu Parishad’s Jain, adding that many of the main beef export businesses are owned by Hindus.

“Exporting the meat is a loss, not a gain for the country,” Jain said. “We are wasting 7,000 liters of water to get 100 kilograms of meat. As India has a drinking water shortage, a ban on cow slaughter will also save water.”

Beef has become big business for India, which sells meat at a discount to other suppliers in the region. Exports fetched $4.4 billion in 2013-2014, compared with $395 million a decade earlier, according to the state-owned Agricultur­al & Processed Food Products Export Developmen­t Authority. By comparison, the U.S. exported $6 billion of beef in the recent fiscal year.

Indian beef sells for $100 to $200 less per ton than meat from its main competitor, Australia, said Ashik Hussain, a supplier of beef to exporters in Maharashtr­a.

With fewer buffaloes sent to slaughterh­ouses, the cost for exporters will increase, shrinking profit, said Mohammad Ali Qureshi, president of the Bombay Suburban Beef Dealers Associatio­n.

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 ?? Bloomberg/PRASHANTH VISHWANATH­AN ?? A caretaker washes buffaloes at a dairy in New Delhi, India, on Wednesday. The government of the state of Maharashtr­a last week banned possession of beef and its byproducts and the slaughteri­ng of cows, bulls and bullocks.
Bloomberg/PRASHANTH VISHWANATH­AN A caretaker washes buffaloes at a dairy in New Delhi, India, on Wednesday. The government of the state of Maharashtr­a last week banned possession of beef and its byproducts and the slaughteri­ng of cows, bulls and bullocks.

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