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Cattle slaughter in India

Cattle slaughter in India, especially cow slaughter, is controversial because of cattle's status as endeared and respected living beings to adherents of Dharmic religions like Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism and Sikhism;[2][3][4][5][6] while being an acceptable source of meat for Muslims, Christians and Jews.[7][8][9][10][11] Cow slaughter has been shunned for a number of reasons, specifically because of the cow's association with the god Krishna in Hinduism, and because cattle have been an integral part of rural livelihoods as an economic necessity.[12][13][14] Cattle slaughter has also been opposed by various Indian religions because of the ethical principle of Ahimsa (non-violence) and the belief in the unity of all life.[15][16][17][18] Legislation against cattle slaughter is in place throughout most states and territories of India.[18]

India's beef industry is predominantly based on the slaughter of domesticated water buffaloes or carabeef.[1]

On 26 October 2005, the Supreme Court of India, in a landmark judgement, upheld the constitutional validity of anti-cow slaughter laws enacted by various state governments of India.[19][20][21][22] 20 out of 28 states in India had various laws regulating the act of slaughtered cow, prohibiting the slaughter or sale of cows.[23][24][25][26][27] Goa, Daman and Diu, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Pondicherry, Kerala, Arunachal and the other Seven Sister States and West Bengal are the places where there are no restrictions on cow slaughter.[28][29][30][31] The ban in Kashmir was lifted in 2019.[32] As per existing meat export policy in India, the export of beef (meat of cow, oxen and calf) is prohibited.[33] Bone in meat, carcass, half carcass of buffalo is also prohibited and is not permitted to be exported. Only the boneless meats of buffalo, goat, sheep and birds are permitted for export.[34][35] India feels that the restriction on export to only boneless meat with a ban on meat with bones will add to the brand image of Indian meat. Animal carcasses are subjected to maturation for at least 24 hours before deboning. Subsequent heat processing during the bone removal operation is believed to be sufficient to kill the virus causing foot and mouth disease.[36]

The laws governing cattle slaughter in India vary greatly from state to state. The "Preservation, protection and improvement of stock and prevention of animal diseases, veterinary training and practice" is Entry 15 of the State List of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution, meaning that State legislatures have exclusive powers to legislate the prevention of slaughter and preservation of cattle. Some states permit the slaughter of cattle with restrictions like a "fit-for-slaughter" certificate which may be issued depending on factors like age and sex of cattle, continued economic viability etc. Others completely ban cattle slaughter, while there is no restriction in a few states.[37] On 26 May 2017, the Ministry of Environment of the Government of India led by Bharatiya Janata Party imposed a ban on the sale and purchase of cattle for slaughter at animal markets across India, under Prevention of Cruelty to Animals statutes,[38][39] although Supreme Court of India suspended the ban on sale of cattle in its judgement in July 2017,[40] giving relief to beef and leather industries.[41]

According to a 2016 United States Department of Agriculture review, India has rapidly grown to become the world's largest beef exporter, accounting for 20% of world's beef trade based on its large water buffalo meat processing industry.[1] Surveys of cattle slaughter operations in India have reported hygiene and ethics concerns.[42][43] According to United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization and European Union, India beef consumption per capita per year is the world's lowest amongst the countries it surveyed.[44] India produced 3.643 million metric tons of beef in 2012, of which 1.963 million metric tons was consumed domestically and 1.680 million metric tons was exported. According to a 2012 report, India ranks fifth in the world in beef production and seventh in domestic consumption.[45] The Indian government requires mandatory microbiological and other testing of exported beef.[46]

History edit

Indian religions edit

The majority of scholars explain the veneration for cattle among Hindus in economic terms, which includes the importance of dairy in the diet, use of cow dung as fuel and fertilizer, and the importance that cattle have historically played in agriculture.[47] Ancient texts such as Rig Veda, Puranas highlight the importance of the cattle.[47] The scope, extent and status of cows throughout during ancient India is a subject of debate. According to D. N. Jha's 2009 work The Myth of the Holy Cow, for example, cows and other cattle were neither inviolable nor revered in the ancient times as they were later.[48][49] Grihya sutra recommends that beef be eaten by the mourners, after a funeral ceremony, as a ritual rite of passage.[50] According to Marvin Harris, the Vedic literature is contradictory, with some suggesting ritual slaughter and meat consumption, while others suggesting a taboo on meat eating.[51]

 
A 2nd-century CE sculpture of Nandi bull. It is a sacred symbol in Shaivism tradition of Hinduism.

The protection of animal life was championed by Jainism, on the grounds that violence against life forms is a source of suffering in the universe and a human being creates bad karma by violence against any living being.[52] The Chandogya Upanishad mentions the ethical value of Ahimsa, or non-violence towards all beings.[52][53] By mid 1st millennium BCE, all three major Indian religions – Hinduism, Jainism and Buddhism – were championing non-violence as an ethical value, and something that affected one's rebirth. According to Harris, by about 200 CE, food and feasting on animal slaughter were widely considered as a form of violence against life forms, and became a religious and social taboo.[14][51] Ralph Fitch, a gentleman merchant of London and one of the earliest English travellers to India, wrote a letter home in 1580 stating, "They have a very strange order among them – they worship a cow and esteem much of the cow's dung to paint the walls of their houses ... They eat no flesh, but live by roots and rice and milk."[54]

The cow has been a symbol of wealth in India since ancient times.[55]

Hinduism edit

 
A goat being slaughtered at Kali Puja, painting by an Indian artist. Dated between 1800 and 1899. Inscription on verso: "A Hindoo sacrifice"
 
Kamadhenu

According to Nanditha Krishna the cow veneration in ancient India during the Vedic era, the religious texts written during this period called for non-violence towards all bipeds and quadrupeds, and often equated killing of a cow with the killing of a human being specifically a Brahmin.[56] Nanditha Krishna stated that the hymn 8.3.25 of the Hindu scripture Atharvaveda (≈1200–1500 BCE) condemns all killings of men, cattle, and horses, and prays to god Agni to punish those who kill.[57][58]

 
The iconography of popular Hindu deity Krishna often includes cows. He is revered in Vaishnavism.

According to Harris, the literature relating to cow veneration became common in 1st millennium CE, and by about 1000 CE vegetarianism, along with a taboo against beef, became a well accepted mainstream Hindu tradition.[51] This practice was inspired by the belief in Hinduism that a soul is present in all living beings, life in all its forms is interconnected, and non-violence towards all creatures is the highest ethical value.[14][51] Vegetarianism is a part of the Hindu culture. God Krishna, one of the incarnations (Avatar) of Vishnu, is associated with cows, adding to its endearment.[14][51]

Study shows ancient Hindus ate meat-heavy food.[59] Many ancient and medieval Hindu texts debate the rationale for a voluntary stop to cow slaughter and the pursuit of vegetarianism as a part of a general abstention from violence against others and all killing of animals.[60][61] Some significant debates between pro-non-vegetarianism and pro-vegetarianism, with mention of cattle meat as food, is found in several books of the Hindu epic, the Mahabharata, particularly its Book III, XII, XIII and XIV.[60] It is also found in the Ramayana.[61] These two epics are not only literary classics, but they have also been popular religious classics.[62]

The Mahabharata debate presents one meat-producing hunter who defends his profession as dharmic.[60] The hunter, in this ancient Sanskrit text, states that meat consumption should be okay because animal sacrifice was practiced in the Vedic age, that the flesh nourishes people, that man must eat to live and plants like animals are alive too, that the nature of life is such every life form eats the other, that no profession is totally non-violent because even agriculture destroys numerous living beings when the plough digs the land.[60] The hunter's arguments are, states Alsdorf, followed by stanzas that present support for restricted meat-eating on specific occasions.[60]

The pro-vegetarianism sections of these Hindu texts counter these views. One section acknowledges that the Vedas do mention sacrifice, but not killing the animal. The proponents of vegetarianism state that Vedic teachings explicitly teach against killing, its verses can be interpreted in many ways, that the correct interpretation is of the sacrifice as the interiorized spiritual sacrifice, one where it is an "offering of truth (satya) and self-restraint (damah)", with the proper sacrifice being one "with reverence as the sacrificial meal and Veda study as the herbal juices".[63][64] The sections that appeal for vegetarianism, including abstention from cow slaughter, state that life forms exist in different levels of development, some life forms have more developed sensory organs, that non-violence towards fellow man and animals who experience pain and suffering is an appropriate ethical value. It states that one's guiding principle should be conscientious atmaupamya (literally, "to-respect-others-as-oneself").[60]

According to Ludwig Alsdorf, "Indian vegetarianism is unequivocally based on ahimsa (non-violence)" as evidenced by ancient smritis and other ancient texts of Hinduism. He adds that the endearment and respect for cattle in Hinduism is more than a commitment to vegetarianism, it has become integral to its theology.[65] According to Juli Gittinger, it is often argued that cow sacredness and protection is a fundamental quality of Hinduism, but she considers this to be a false claim.[66] This, states Gittinger, could be understood more as an example of "sanskritization" or presentation of certain traditions followed by its upper castes as purer, informed form of Hinduism and possibly an influence of Jainism on Hinduism.[66] The respect for cattle is widespread but not universal. Some Hindus (Shaktism) practice animal sacrifice and eat meat certain festivals. According to Christopher Fuller, animal sacrifices have been rare among the Hindus outside a few eastern states and Himalayan regions of the Indian subcontinent.[65][67] To the majority of modern Indians, states Alsdorf, respect for cattle and disrespect for slaughter is a part of their ethos and there is "no ahimsa without renunciation of meat consumption".[65]

Jainism edit

Jainism is against violence to all living beings, including cattle. According to the Jaina sutras, humans must avoid all killing and slaughter because all living beings are fond of life, they suffer, they feel pain, they like to live, and long to live. All beings should help each other live and prosper, according to Jainism, not kill and slaughter each other.[68][69]

In the Jain tradition, neither monks nor laypersons should cause others or allow others to work in a slaughterhouse.[70] Jains believe that vegetarian sources can provide adequate nutrition, without creating suffering for animals such as cattle.[70] According to some Jain scholars, slaughtering cattle increases ecological burden from human food demands since the production of meat entails intensified grain demands, and reducing cattle slaughter by 50 percent would free up enough land and ecological resources to solve all malnutrition and hunger worldwide. The Jain community leaders, states Christopher Chapple, has actively campaigned to stop all forms of animal slaughter including cattle.[71]

Jains have led a historic campaign to ban the slaughter of cows and all other animals, particularly during their annual festival of Paryushana (also called Daslakshana by the Digambara).[72] Historical records, for example, state that the Jain leaders lobbied Mughal emperors to ban slaughter of cattles and other animals, during this 8 to 12-day period. In some cases, such as during the 16th century rule of Akbar, they were granted their request and an edict was issued by Akbar. Jahangir revoked the ban upon coronation, reinstated it in 1610 when Jain community approached and appealed to him, then later reversed the 1610 ban with a new edict.[73][74]

Buddhism edit

The texts of Buddhism state ahimsa to be one of five ethical precepts, which requires a practicing Buddhist to "refrain from killing living beings".[75] Slaughtering cow has been a taboo, with some texts suggest taking care of a cow is a means of taking care of "all living beings". Cattle is seen as a form of reborn human beings in the endless rebirth cycles in samsara, protecting animal life and being kind to cattle and other animals is good karma.[75][76] The Buddhist texts state that killing or eating meat is wrong, and they urge Buddhist laypersons to not operate slaughterhouses, nor trade in meat.[77][78][79] Indian Buddhist texts encourage a plant-based diet.[14][51]

Saving animals from slaughter for meat, is believed in Buddhism to be a way to acquire merit for better rebirth.[76] According to Richard Gombrich, there has been a gap between Buddhist precepts and practice. Vegetarianism is admired, states Gombrich, but often it is not practiced. Nevertheless, adds Gombrich, there is a general belief among Theravada Buddhists that eating beef is worse than other meat and the ownership of cattle slaughterhouses by Buddhists is relatively rare.[80][note 1]

.

Islam edit

Cattle in medieval India

Hindus, like early Christians and Manichaeans,
forbade the killing and eating of meat [of cows].

Abū Rayḥān Al-Biruni, 1017–1030 CE
Persian visitor to India[82][83]

With the arrival of Islamic rule as the Delhi Sultanate in the 12th-century, Islamic dietary practices entered India. According to the verses of the Quran, such as 16:5–8 and 23:21–23, God created cattle to benefit man and recommends Muslims to eat cattle meat, but forbids pork.[84] Cattle slaughter had been and continued to be a religiously approved practice among the Muslim rulers and the followers of Islam, particularly on festive occasions such as the Eid al-Adha.[84][85]

The earliest texts on the invasion of the Indian subcontinent mention the cow slaughter taboo, and its use by Muslim army commanders as a political message by committing the taboo inside temples.[86] For example, in the early 11th century narrative of Al-Biruni, the story of 8th-century Muhammad bin Qasim conquest of Multan is mentioned. In this Al-Biruni narrative, according to Manan Ahmed Asif – a historian of Islam in South and Southeast Asia, "Qasim first asserts the superiority of Islam over the polytheists by committing a taboo (killing a cow) and publicly soiling the idol (giving the cow meat as an offering)" before allowing the temple to continue as a place of worship.[86] In the early 13th-century Persian text of Chach Nama, the defending fort residents call the attacking Muslims in rage as "Chandalas and cow-eaters", but adds André Wink, the text is silent about "cow-worship".[87] In the texts of court historians of the Delhi Sultanate, and later the Mughal Empire, cow slaughter taboo in India is mentioned, as well as cow slaughter as a means of political message, desecration, as well as its prohibition by Sultans and Muslim Emperors as a means of accommodation of public sentiments in the Indian subcontinent.[88][89][90]

In 1756–57, in what was his fourth invasion of India, the founder of the Durrani Empire, Ahmad Shāh Durrānī sacked Delhi and plundered Agra, Mathura, and Vrindavan.[91] On his way back to Afghanistan, he attacked the Golden Temple in Amritsar and filled its sacred pool with the blood of slaughtered cows.[92]

While most Muslims consider cattle to be a source of religiously acceptable meat, some Muslim Sufi sects of India practiced vegetarianism,[93]

Christianity edit

European memoirs on cattle in India

They would not kill an animal on any account,
not even a fly, or a flea, or a louse,
or anything in fact that has life;
for they say these have all souls,
and it would be sin to do so.

Marco Polo, III.20, 13th century
Venetian traveler to India[94]

Christianity is one of India's largest religions after Hinduism and Islam, with approximately 28 million followers, constituting 2.3 percent of India's population (2011 census). According to legend, the Christian faith was introduced to India by Thomas the Apostle, who supposedly reached the Malabar Coast (Kerala) in 52 AD. Later Christianity also arrived on the Indian sea coast with Christian travelers and merchants. Christians are a significant minority and a major religious group in three states of India – Meghalaya, Mizoram, and Nagaland with a plural majority in Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh and other states with significant Christian population include Coastal Andhra, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Kanara, the south shore and North-east India. Christians in India, especially the Saint Thomas Christians of Kerala, to an extent follow Hindu practices. Moreover, a significant number of Indians profess personal Christian faith outside the domain of traditional and institutionalized Christianity and do not associate with any Church or its conventional code of belief. In Christianity, no dietary restrictions exists and any kind of meat has been eaten across Christian followers in different parts of India for centuries.[95]

 
Saint Luke the Evangelist: The bull, is an ancient Christian symbol of redemption and life through sacrifice, signifying Luke's records of Christ as a priest and his ultimate sacrifice for the future of humanity.

Mughal Empire edit

 
A pamphlet protesting cow slaughter, first created in 1893. A meat eater (mansahari) is shown as a demon with sword, with a man telling him "don't kill, cow is life-source for all". Part of a series by Raja Ravi Varma (Redrawn with demon) (c. 1897).[96]

Cattle slaughter, in accordance with the Islamic custom, was practiced in the Mughal Empire under its Sunni rulers. Despite cow slaughter not being a crime, states Muhammad Mahbubur Rahman, "no one dared publicly to slaughter cows, particularly in Hindu-dominated areas as people could instantly punish the culprit".[97]

The Mughal emperor Humayun opposed cow slaughter and refused to eat beef in an incident as cited by Jouher, after the killing of cows in a Hindu territory by his soldiers led to clashes, in the Tezkereh-al-Vakiat. Though historians doubt translation capabilities of Tezkereh-al-Vakiat by a British officer, Major Charles Stewart, there is enough hint that the early Mughal emperors were averse to cow slaughter for beef.[98] During Akbar's reign, there was a strict ban on cow slaughter. This was followed by his son Jehangir and then Shah Jahan as well.[99]

It is well known that emperor Aurangzeb followed a hard line against Hindus. In 1645, soon after being appointed Governor of Gujarat by Shah Jahan, Aurangzeb desecrated the Chintamani Parshvanath Jain temple near Sarashpur, Gujarat by killing a cow inside the Jain temple and lopping off the noses of the statues and converting it into a mosque calling it the "Might of Islam".[100][101][note 2] In present-day Punjab, a Hindu delegation to the 9th Sikh guru Guru Tegh Bahadur requested him to ban cow slaughter and told him "Cows are everywhere being slaughtered. If any cow or buffalo belonging to a Hindu is mortally ill, the Qazi comes and kills it on the spot. Muslims then flay it, cut it in pieces and carry it away. This causes us much distress. If we fail to inform the Qazi when a beast is dying, he punishes us, saying, 'Why did you not tell me? Now its spirit has gone to hell, whereas had it been killed in the approved Muslim manner, its spirit would have gone to paradise.'"[103][99]

Experts, however, doubt that Aurangzeb would have lifted the ban on cow slaughter enforced by his predecessors. Even during later Mughal period, there are documented references about the ban. During Emperor Farrukhsiyar's rule, for instance, there is documentary evidence of a royal trial over accusations of cow slaughter. There are references though that the ban would be relaxed during Bakr Id.[99]

Maratha Empire edit

According to Ian Copland and other scholars, the Maratha Empire, which led a Hindu rebellion against the Muslim Mughal Empire and created a Hindu state in the 17th and 18th centuries, respected mosques, mausoleums and Sufi pirs.[104][verification needed] However, the Maratha polity sharply enforced the Hindu sentiments for cow protection. This may be linked to the Bhakti movement that developed before the rise of the Maratha Empire, states Copland, where legends and a theology based on the compassion and love stories of Hindu god Krishna, himself a cowherd, became integral to regional religiosity.[104]

The Mahratha confederacy adopted the same approach with Portuguese Christians in the Western Ghats and the peninsular coastal regions.[verification needed] Marathas were liberal[citation needed], state Copland and others,[who?] they respected Christian priests, allowed the building of churches and gave state land to Christian causes. However, cattle protection expected by the Hindu majority was the state norm, which Portuguese Christians were required to respect.[105][additional citation(s) needed]

Sikh Empire edit

Cow slaughter was banned by Maharajah Ranjit Singh, the founder of the Sikh Empire in Punjab. This was not due to the beliefs of Sikhs.[106] Many butcher houses were banned and restrictions were put on the slaughter of cow and sale of beef in the Sikh Empire,[107] as following the traditions, cow was as sacred to the Hindus.[108] During the Sikh reign, cow slaughter was a capital offence, for which perpetrators were even executed.[106][109]

British rule edit

With the advent of British rule in India, eating beef along with drinking whiskey as it was part of their food culture, in English-language colleges in Bengal, became a method of fitting in into the British culture. Some Hindus, in the 1830s, consumed beef to show how they "derided irrational Hindu customs", according to Barbara Metcalf and Thomas Metcalf.[110]

The reverence for the cow played a role in the Indian Rebellion of 1857 against the British East India Company. Hindu and Muslim sepoys in the army of the East India Company came to believe that their paper cartridges, which held a measured amount of gunpowder, were greased with cow and pig fat as it was the best and easily accessible method available at that time for greasing weapons since cattle and pigs had a good amount of fat in them.

Historians argue that the symbol of the cow was used as a means of mobilizing Hindus.[111] In 1870, the Namdhari Sikhs started the Kuka Revolution, revolting against the British, and seeking to protect the cows from slaughter. A few years later, Swami Dayananda Saraswati called for the stoppage of cow slaughter by the British and suggested the formation of Go-samvardhani Sabhas.[112] In the 1870s, cow protection movements spread rapidly in Punjab, North-West Frontier Province, Oudh State (now Awadh) and Rohilkhand. The Arya Samaj had a tremendous role in skillfully converting this sentiment into a national movement.[111]

The first Gaurakshini sabha (cow protection society) was established in the Punjab in 1882.[113] The movement spread rapidly all over North India and to Bengal, Bombay, Madras presidencies and Central Provinces. The organization rescued wandering cows and reclaimed them to groom them in places called gaushalas (cow refuges). Charitable networks developed all through North India to collect rice from individuals, pool the contributions, and re-sell them to fund the gaushalas. Signatures, up to 350,000 in some places, were collected to demand a ban on cow sacrifice.[114] Between 1880 and 1893, hundreds of gaushalas were opened.[112]

 
cow and its calf in a Hindu temple

Cow protection sentiment reached its peak in 1893. Large public meetings were held in Nagpur, Haridwar and Benares to denounce beef-eaters. Melodramas were conducted to display the plight of cows, and pamphlets were distributed, to create awareness among those who sacrificed and ate them. Riots broke out between Hindus and Muslims in Mau in the Azamgarh district; it took 3 days for the government to regain control. However, Muslims had interpreted this as a promise of protection for those who wanted to perform sacrifices.[115]

The series of violent incidences[spelling?] also resulted in a riot in Bombay involving the working classes, and unrest occurred in places as far away as Rangoon, Burma. An estimated thirty-one to forty-five communal riots broke out over six months and a total of 107 people were killed.[114][116]

Queen Victoria mentioned the cow protection movement in a letter, dated 8 December 1893, to then Viceroy Lansdowne, writing, "The Queen greatly admired the Viceroy's speech on the Cow-killing agitation. While she quite agrees in the necessity of perfect fairness, she thinks the Muhammadans do require more protection than Hindus, and they are decidedly by far the more loyal. Though the Muhammadan's cow-killing is made the pretext for the agitation, it is, in fact, directed against us, who kill far more cows for our army, &c., than the Muhammadans."[112]

Cow slaughter was opposed by some prominent leaders of the independence movement such as Mahatma Gandhi, Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Lala Lajpat Rai, Madan Mohan Malviya, Rajendra Prasad and Purushottam Das Tandon. They supported a ban on cattle slaughter once India gained its independence from the colonial British.[117]

Gandhi supported cow protection and opposed cow slaughter,[118][119] explaining the reverence for cow in March 1945.[120] Gandhi supported the leather industry, but stated that slaughter is unnecessary because the skin can be sourced from cattle after its natural death.[118]

Gandhi said, "I worship it [cow] and I shall defend its worship against the whole world," and that, "the cow is a poem of pity. One reads pity in the gentle animal. She is the mother to millions of Indian mankind. Protection of the cow means protection of the whole dumb creation of God."[118] Gandhi considered cow protection as integral to Hindu beliefs, and called "cow protection to me is one of the most wonderful phenomena in human evolution" and "cow protection is the gift of Hinduism to the world, that it is not Tilak or mantra or caste rules that judge Hindus, but their ability to protect the cow".[118] According to Gandhi, cow protection means "protection of lives that are helpless and weak in the world". "I would not kill a human being for protection a cow", added Gandhi, and "I will not kill a cow for saving a human life, be it ever so precious".[118]

On 25 July 1947, in a prayer meeting, Gandhi opposed laws that were derived from religion. He said, "In India no law can be made to ban cow-slaughter. I do not doubt that Hindus are forbidden the slaughter of cows. I have been long pledged to serve the cow but how can my religion also be the religion of the rest of the Indians? It will mean coercion against those Indians who are not Hindus."[121][122] According to Gandhi, Hindus should not demand cow slaughter laws based on their religious texts or sentiments, in the same way that Muslims should not demand laws based on Shariat (Quran, Hadith) in India or Pakistan.[122]

In 1940, one of the Special Committees of the Indian National Congress stated that slaughter of cow and its progeny must be totally prohibited. However, another Committee of the Congress opposed cow slaughter prohibition stating that the skin and leather of cow and its progeny, which is fresh by slaughter should be sold and exported to earn foreign exchange.[117]

In 1944, the British placed restrictions on cattle slaughter in India, on the grounds that the shortage of cattle was causing anxiety to the Government. The shortage itself was attributed to the increased demand for cattle for cultivation, transport, milk and other purposes. It was decided that, in respect of slaughter by the army authorities, working cattle, as well as, cattle fit for bearing offspring, should not be slaughtered. Accordingly, the slaughter of all cattle below 3 years of age, male cattle between 3 and 10 years, female cattle between 3 and 10 years of age, which are capable of producing milk, as well as all cows which are pregnant or in milk, was prohibited.[117]

During the British Raj, there were several cases of communal riots caused by the slaughter of cows. A historical survey of some major communal riots, between 1717 and 1977, revealed that out of 167 incidents of rioting between Hindus and Muslims, that although in some cases the reasons for provocation of the riots was not given, 22 cases were attributable directly to cow slaughter.[123][124]

Post-Independence edit

 
Stamp of India,Woman Dairy Farmer Cows and Milk Bottles

The Central Government, in a letter dated 20 December 1950, directed the State Governments not to introduce total prohibition on slaughter, stating, "Hides from slaughtered cattle are much superior to hides from the fallen cattle and fetch a higher price. In the absence of slaughter the best type of hide, which fetches good price in the export market will no longer be available. A total ban on slaughter is thus detrimental to the export trade and work against the interest of the Tanning industry in the country."[125]

In 1955, a senior Congress member of parliament Seth Govind Das drafted a bill for India's parliament for a nationwide ban on cow slaughter, stating that a "large majority of the party" was in favour. India's first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru opposed this national ban on cow slaughter, and threatened to resign if the elected representatives passed the bill in India's parliament. The bill failed by a vote of 95 to 12.[126][127] Nehru declared that it was individual states to decide their laws on cow slaughter, states Donald Smith, and criticized the ban on cow slaughter as "a wrong step".[128] However, Nehru's opposition was largely irrelevant, states Steven Wilkinson, because under India's Constitution and federal structure laws such as those on cattle slaughter has been an exclusive State subject rather than being a Central subject. State legislatures such as those of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh enacted their own laws in the 1950s.[128][129]

 
A gaushala in Guntur, Andhra Pradesh.

In 1958, a lawsuit was instigated in the Supreme Court of India regarding the constitutionality of the slaughter ban laws in the state, where Qureshi petitioned that the laws infringed on Muslim rights to freely practice their religion such as sacrificing cows on Bakr-Id day.[128] The Court determined that neither the Quran nor the Hidaya mandates cow slaughter, and the Islamic texts allow a goat or camel be sacrificed instead. Therefore, according to the Court, a total ban on cow slaughter did not infringe on the religious freedom of Muslims under Articles 25 or 48 of its Constitution.[128]

In 1966, Indian independence activist Jayaprakash Narayan wrote a letter to then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi calling for a ban on cow slaughter. Narayan wrote, "For myself, I cannot understand why, in a Hindu majority country like India, where rightly or wrongly, there is such a strong feeling about cow-slaughter, there cannot be a legal ban".[125] In the same year, the Hindu organisations started an agitation demanding a ban on the slaughter of cows. But Indira Gandhi did not accede to the demand.

In July 1995, the Government of India stated before the Supreme Court that, "It is obvious that the Central Government as a whole is encouraging scientific and sustainable development of livestock resources and their efficient utilization which inter-alia includes production of quality meat for export as well as for domestic market. This is being done with a view of increasing the national wealth as well as better returns to the farmer." In recent decades, the Government has started releasing grants and loans for setting up of modern slaughter houses.[125]

Contemporary issues edit

Hygiene edit

Poor hygiene and prevalence of meat-borne disease has been reported in studies of Indian cattle slaughter-houses. For example, in a 1976–1978 survey of 1,100 slaughtered cattle in Kerala slaughter-houses, Prabhakaran and other scholars reported, "468 cases of echinococcosis and 19 cases of cysticercosis", the former affecting 365 livers and 340 lungs. The cattle liver was affected by disease in 79% of cattle and the lung in 73%.[130]

A 2001 study by Sumanth and other scholars on cattle slaughtered in Karnataka reported more than 60% of the carcasses were infected with schistosoma eggs and worms.[43] A 2007 report by Ravindran indicated over 50% of cattle slaughtered in Wayanad were infected.[42] However the population size was very limited and usually restricted to a single slaughter-house, skewing the results.

Illegal slaughterhouses and cattle theft edit

According to media reports, India has numerous illegal slaughterhouses. For example, in the state of Andhra Pradesh, the officials in 2013 reported over 3,000 illegal slaughterhouses.[131] Cattle are traditionally left to freely roam streets and graze in India. These are easy prey to thieves, state Rosanna Masiola and Renato Tomei.[132] According to The New York Times, the organized mafia gangs pick up the cattle they can find and sell them to these illegal slaughterhouses. These crimes are locally called "cattle rustling" or "cattle lifting".[131] In many cases, the cows belong to poor dairy farmers who lack the facility or infrastructure to feed and maintain the cows, and they don't traditionally keep them penned. According to Masiola and Tomei, the increasing meat consumption has led to cows becoming a target for theft.[133]

The theft of cattle for slaughter and beef production is economically attractive to the mafias in India. In 2013, states Gardiner Harris, a truck can fit 10 cows, each fetching about 5,000 rupees (about US$94 in 2013), or over US$900 per cattle stealing night operation. In a country where some 800 million people live on less than US$2 per day, such theft-based mafia operations are financially attractive.[131] According to Andrew Buncombe, when smuggled across its border, the price per cattle is nearly threefold higher and the crime is financially more attractive.[134] Many states have reported rising thefts of cattle and associated violence, according to The Indian Express.[135]

According to T.N. Madan, Muslim groups have been accused of stealing cattle as a part of their larger violence against non-Muslims.[136] Cattle theft, states David Gilmartin and other scholars, was a common crime in British India and has been a trigger for riots.[137][138]

According to the Bangladeshi newspaper The Daily Star, some of cattle theft operations move the cattle stolen in India across the border into Bangladesh, ahead of festivals such as Eid-ul-Azha when the demand for meat increases. The criminals dye the white or red cows into black, to make identifying the stolen cow difficult. The Border Guard Bangladesh in 2016 reported of confiscating stolen cattle, where some of cattle's original skin color had been "tampered with".[139] Hundreds of thousands of cows, states the British newspaper The Independent, are illegally smuggled from India into Bangladesh every year to be slaughtered.[134] Gangs from both sides of the border are involved in this illegal smuggling involving an estimated 1.5 million (15 lakhs) cattle a year, and cattle theft is a source of the supply, states Andrew Buncombe.[134] According to Zahoor Rather, trade in stolen cattle is one of the important crime-related border issues between India and Bangladesh.[140]

Castes and religions edit

Hindu views on cattle slaughter and beef eating is caste-based, while other scholars disagree. Dalit Hindus who eat beef state the former, while those who don't state that the position of Dalit Hindus on cattle slaughter is ambiguous.[141][142]

Deryck Lodrick states, for example, "beef-eating is common among low caste Hindus", and vegetarianism is an upper caste phenomenon.[141] In contrast, cow-cherishing, Krishna-worshipping rustic piety, state Susan Bayly and others, has been popular among agriculture-driven, cattle husbandry, farm laboring and merchant castes. These have typically been considered the low-castes in Hinduism.[143] According to Bayly, reverence for the cow is widely shared in India across castes. The traditional belief has also associated death or the dead with being unclean, polluting or defiling, such as those who handle corpse, carrion and animal remains.[143] However, the tradition differentiates between natural or accidental death, and intentional slaughter. According to Frederick J. Simoons, many members of low castes and tribal groups in India reject "cow slaughter and beef eating, some of them quite strongly", while others support beef eating and cattle slaughter.[11]

According to Simoons and Lodrick, the reverence for cattle among Hindus, and Indians in general, is more comprehensively understood by considering both the religious dimensions and the daily lives in rural India.[144] The veneration of cow across various Hindu castes, states Lodrick, emerged with the "fifteenth century revival of Vaishnavism", when god Krishna along with his cows became a popular object of bhakti (devotional worship).[145] In contrast, other scholars such as J. A. B. van Buitenen and Daniel Sheridan state that the theology and the most popular texts related to Krishna, such as the Bhagavad Gita was composed by about 2nd century BCE,[146] and the Bhagavata Purana was composed between 500 and 1000 CE.[147][148]

According to People's Union for Democratic Rights (PUDR), some Dalits work in leather which includes cow-skin and they rely on it for their livelihood. The position of Dalits to cow-protection is highly ambivalent, states PUDR, given their Hindu identity and the "endemic contradiction – between the 'Hindu' ethos of protecting the cow and a trade dependent fundamentally on the skin of cows".[149] The selling of old cattle for skin, according to them, is supported by members of both "dominant and subordinate castes" for the leather-related economy.[150] Dominant groups, officials and even some Dalits state that "Dalits are cow-protectors". The inclusion of Dalits in cow-protection ideology, according to PUDR, is accompanied by "avowal of loyalty to cow-protection" exposing the fragility of the cow-protection ideology across castes.[151]

Some Dalit student associations in the Hyderabad region state that beef preparations, such as beef biryani, is the traditional food of low-castes. Historical evidence does not support this claim, state Claude Levy-Straus and Brigitte Sebastia. Beef as the traditional food of impoverished Dalits is a reconstruction of history and Indian beef dishes are a Mughal era innovation and more recently invented tradition. It is the nineteenth century politics that has associated beef and cattle slaughter with Muslim and Dalit identity, states Sebastia.[152]

Economic imperative edit

According to anthropologist Marvin Harris, the importance of cattle to Hindus and other religious groups is beyond religion, because the cattle has been and remains an important pillar of rural economy.[153] In the traditional economy, states Harris, a team of oxen is "Indian peasant's tractor, thresher and family car combined", and the cow is the factory that produces those oxen.[153][note 3] The cattle produce nutritious milk, their dung when dried serves as a major cooking fuel, and for the poor the cattle is an essential partner in many stages of agriculture. When cattle fall sick, the family worries over them like Westerners do over their pets or family members. A natural loss of a cattle from untimely death can cripple a poor family, and thus slaughtering a creature so useful and essential is unthinkable. According to Harris, India's unpredictable monsoons and famines over its history meant even greater importance of cattle, because Indian breeds of cattle can survive with little food and water for extended periods of time.[153]

According to Britha Mikkelsen and other scholars, cow dung produced by young and old cattle is the traditional cooking fuel as dung-cakes and fertilizer in India. The recycling substitutes over 25 million tons of fossil fuels or 60 million tons of wood every year, providing the majority of cooking fuel needs in rural India.[154][155] In addition to being essential fuel for rural family, cattle manure is a significant source of fertilizer in Indian agriculture.[156]

The Indian religions adapted to the rural economic constraints, states Harris. Preserving cattle by opposing slaughter has been and remains an economic necessity and an insurance for the impoverished.[153] The cow is sacred in India, states Harris, not because of superstitious, capricious and ignorant beliefs, but because of real economic imperatives and cattle's role in the Indian tradition of integrated living. Cattle became essential in India, just like dogs or cars became essential in other human cultures, states Harris.[153]

Animal cruelty edit

The slaughterhouses in India have been accused of cruelty against animals by PETA and other humane treatment of animals-groups.[157] According to PETA and these groups, the slaughterhouse workers slit animals' throats with dull blades and let them bleed to death. Cattle are skinned and dismembered while they are still alive and in full view of other animals.[157]

The Supreme Court of India, in February 2017, ordered a state governments to stop the illegal slaughterhouses and set up enforcement committees to monitor the treatment of animals used for meat and leather.[157] The Court has also ruled that the Indian Constitution requires Indian citizens to show compassion to the animal kingdom, respect the fundamental rights of animals, and asked the states to prevent cruelty to animals.[158]

Vigilantism edit

According to Judith Walsh, widespread cow protection riots occurred repeatedly in British India in the 1880s and 1890s. These were observed in regions of Punjab, United Provinces, Bihar, Bengal, Bombay Presidency and in parts of South Burma (Rangoon). The anti-Cow Killing riots of 1893 in Punjab caused the death of at least 100 people.[159][160] The 1893 cow killing riots started during the Muslim festival of Bakr-Id, the riot repeated in 1894, and they were the largest riots in British India after the 1857 revolt.[161] One of the issues, states Walsh, in these riots was "the Muslim slaughter of cows for meat, particularly as part of religious festivals such as Bakr-Id".[160]

According to Mark Doyle, the first cow protection societies on the Indian subcontinent were started by Kukas of Sikhism (also called Namdharis).[162] The Sikh Kukas or Namdharis were agitating for cow protection after the British annexed Punjab. In 1871, states Peter van der Veer, Sikhs killed Muslim butchers of cows in Amritsar and Ludhiana, and viewed cow protection as a "sign of the moral quality of the state".[163] According to Barbara Metcalf and Thomas Metcalf, Sikhs were agitating for the well-being of cows in the 1860s, and their ideas spread to Hindu reform movements.[164] Cattle protection-related violence continued at numerous occasions, often over the Muslim festival of Bakri-Id, in the first half of the 20th century.[165][166]

Cow slaughter in contemporary India has triggered riots and violent vigilante groups.[159][167][168]

According to PUDR, the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, a Hindu group, and the Gauraksha Samiti have defended violent vigilantism around cow protection as sentiments against the "sin of cow-slaughter" and not related to "the social identity of the victims".[169] Various groups, such as the families of Dalits who were victims of a mob violence linked to cow-slaughter in 2002, did not question the legitimacy of cow protection.[170]

According to a Reuters report, citing IndiaSpend analysis, a total of "44 Indians – 39 of them Muslims – have been killed and 124 injured", between 2010 and June 2018 in cow-related violence.[171]

Stray cattle edit

Fear of arrest, persecution, and of lynching by cow vigilantes has reduced the trading of cattle. Once a cow stops giving milk, feeding and maintenance of the cow becomes a financial burden on the farmer who cannot afford their upkeep. Cattle that farmers are unable to sell are eventually abandoned.

India has over 5 million stray cattle according to the livestock census data released in January 2020.[172] The stray cow attacks on humans and crops in both urban and rural areas is an issue for the residents.[173][174] Stray cattle are a nuisance to traffic in urban areas and frequently cause road accidents.[172][175] The problem of solid waste pollution, especially plastic pollution and garbage dumped at public places, poses a risk to stray cattle which feed on garbage.[176]

Legislation edit

 
Cow slaughter laws in various states in India

The "Preservation, protection and improvement of stock and prevention of animal diseases, veterinary training and practice" is Entry 15 of the State List of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution, meaning that State Legislatures have exclusive powers to legislate the prevention of slaughter and preservation of cattle.[177][178]

The prohibition of cow slaughter is also one of the Directive Principles of State Policy contained in Article 48 of the Constitution. It reads, "The State shall endeavour to organise agriculture and animal husbandry on modern and scientific lines and shall, in particular, take steps for preserving and improving the breeds, and prohibiting the slaughter of cows and calves and other milch and draught cattle."[179]

Several State Governments and Union Territories (UTs) have enacted cattle preservation laws in one form or the other. Arunachal Pradesh, Kerala, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Tripura, Lakshadweep, and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands have no legislation. All other states/UTs have enacted legislation to prevent the slaughter of cow and its progeny.[180] Kerala is a major consumer of beef and has no regulation on the slaughter of cow and its progeny. As a result, cattle is regularly smuggled into Kerala from the neighbouring States of Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh, for the purpose of slaughter.[180] There have been several attacks on cow transporters, on the suspicion of carrying cows for slaughter.[181][182][183][184] Between May 2015 and May 2017, at least ten Muslims were killed in these attacks.[182]

In 1958, Muslims of Bihar petitioned the Supreme Court of India that the ban on cow slaughter violated their religious right. The Court unanimously rejected their claim.[185]

In several cases, such as Mohd. Hanif Qureshi v. State of Bihar (AIR 1959 SCR 629), Hashumatullah v. State of Madhya Pradesh, Abdul Hakim and others v. State of Bihar (AIR 1961 SC 448) and Mohd. Faruk v. State of Madhya Pradesh, the Supreme Court has held that, "A total ban [on cattle slaughter] was not permissible if, under economic conditions, keeping useless bull or bullock be a burden on the society and therefore not in the public interest."[85] The clause "under economic conditions, keeping useless (...)" has been studied by the Animal Welfare Board of India which determined that the fuel made from cow dung for household cooking purposes in the Indian society suggests that the cattle is never useless while it produces dung.[85]

In May 2016, Bombay High Court gave the judgement that consumption or possession of beef is legal under Article 21 of Constitution of India, but upheld the ban on cow slaughter in the state of Maharashtra.[186][187]

The Supreme Court of India heard a case between 2004 and 2017. The case petitioned the Court to order a ban on the common illegal treatment of animals during transport and slaughter. In February 2017, the Court ordered a state governments to stop the illegal slaughterhouses and set up enforcement committees to monitor the treatment of animals used for meat and leather.[157] The Court has also ruled, according to a Times of India report, that "it was evident from the combined reading of Articles 48 and 51- A(g) of the [Indian] Constitution that citizens must show compassion to the animal kingdom. The animals have their own fundamental rights. Article 48 specifically lays down that the state shall endeavour to prohibit the slaughter of cows and calves, other milch and draught cattle".[158]

Non-uniformity edit

No state law explicitly bans the consumption of beef. There is a lack of uniformity among State laws governing cattle slaughter. The strictest laws are in Delhi, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, Ladakh, Punjab, Rajasthan and Uttarakhand, where the slaughter of cow and its progeny, including bulls and bullocks of all ages, is completely banned. However, in Uttarakhand, slaughter of cows and bulls which are deemed to be injured or otherwise useless, is permitted with necessary permission. Most States prohibit the slaughter of cows of all ages. However, Assam and West Bengal permit the slaughter of cows of over the ages of 10 and 14 years, respectively. Most States prohibit the slaughter of calves, whether male or female. With the exception of Bihar and Rajasthan, where age of a calf is given as below 3 years, the other States have not defined the age of a calf. According to the National Commission on Cattle, the definition of a calf being followed in Maharashtra, by some executive instructions, was "below the age of 1 year".[188][189]

In Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu, Delhi, Goa, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Puducherry, Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand violation of State laws on cattle slaughter are both cognizable and non-bailable offences. Most of other states specify that offences would be cognizable only. The maximum term of imprisonment varies from 6 months to 14 years(life-term) and the fine from 1,000 to 5,00,000. Delhi and Madhya Pradesh have fixed a mandatory minimum term of imprisonment at 6 months.

Cows are routinely shipped to states with lower or no requirement for slaughter, even though it is illegal in most states to ship animals across state borders to be slaughtered.[190][191] Many illegal slaughterhouses operate in large cities such as Chennai and Mumbai. As of 2004, there were 3,600 legal and 30,000 illegal slaughterhouses in India.[192] Efforts to close them down have, so far, been largely unsuccessful. In 2013, Andhra Pradesh estimated that there were 3,100 illegal and 6 licensed slaughterhouses in the State.[193]

Legislative history edit

Constituent Assembly edit

After India attained Independence, the members of the Constituent Assembly, a body consisting of indirectly elected representatives set up for the purpose of drafting a constitution for India, debated the question of making a provision for the protection and preservation of the cow in the Constitution of India. An amendment for including a provision in the Directive Principles of State Policy as Article 38A was introduced by Pandit Thakur Dass Bhargava. The amendment read, "The State shall endeavour to organise agriculture and animal husbandry on modern and scientific lines and shall in particular take steps for preserving and improving the breeds of cattle and prohibit the slaughter of cow and other useful cattle, specially milch and draught cattle and their young stock".[194]

Another amendment motion was moved by Seth Govind Das, who sought to extend the scope of the provisions for prohibiting slaughter to cover cow and its progeny by adding the following words at the end of Bhargava's amendment, "'The word "cow' includes bulls, bullocks, young stock of genus cow". Bhargava's amendment was passed by the Constituent Assembly, but Das' was rejected.[194]

Pandit Thakur Dass Bhargava (East Punjab), Seth Govind Das (Central Provinces and Berar), Shibban Lal Saksena (United Provinces), Ram Sahai (United State of Gwalior-Indore-Malwa: Madhya Bharat), Raghu Vira (Central Provinces and Berar) and Raghunath Vinayak Dhulekar (United Provinces) strongly pleaded for the inclusion of a provision in the Constitution for prohibiting the slaughter of cows. Although some members were keen on including the provision in the chapter on Fundamental Rights but, later as a compromise and on the basis of an assurance given by B. R. Ambedkar, the amendment was moved for inclusion as a Directive Principle of State Policy.[194]

Bhargava stated that "While moving this amendment, I have hesitation in stating that for people like me and those that do not agree with the point of view of Ambedkar and others, this entails, in a way, a sort of sacrifice. Seth Govind Das had sent one such amendment to be included in the Fundamental Rights and other members also had sent similar amendments. To my mind, it would have been much better if this could have been incorporated in the Fundamental Rights, but some of my Assembly friends differed and it is the desire of Ambedkar that this matter, instead of being included in Fundamental Rights should be incorporated in the Directive Principles. As a matter of fact, it is the agreed opinion of the Assembly that this problem should be solved in such a manner that the objective is gained without using any sort of coercion. I have purposely adopted this course, as to my mind, the amendment fulfills our object and is midway between the Directive Principles and the Fundamental Rights." Bhargava also observed that "I do not want that, due to its inclusion in the Fundamental Rights, non-Hindus should complain that they have been forced to accept a certain thing against their will." The result of the debate in the Constituent Assembly was that the Bhargava's amendment was carried and the Article in its present form exists as Article 48 of the Constitution, as one of the Directive Principles of State Policy.[194]

Parliament edit

A number of Private Member's Bills and Resolutions regarding the prevention of cow slaughter have been introduced in both Houses of Parliament, from time to time. However, none have been successful in obtaining a complete nationwide ban on cow slaughter. Attempts to address the issue through a central legislation or otherwise are described below.[195]

Vinoba Bhave went on an indefinite fast from 22 April 1979 demanding that the Governments of West Bengal and Kerala agree to enact legislation banning cow slaughter. On 12 April 1979, a Private Members Resolution was passed in the Lok Sabha, by 42 votes to 8, with 12 absentees. It read, "This House directs the Government to ensure total ban on the slaughter of cows of all ages and calves in consonance with the Directive Principles laid down in Article 48 of the Constitution as interpreted by the Supreme Court, as well as necessitated by strong economic considerations based on the recommendations of the Cattle Preservation and Development Committee and the reported fast by Acharya Vinoba Bhave from 21st April, 1979".[196]

Then Prime Minister Morarji Desai later announced in Parliament that the government would initiate action for amending the Constitution with a view to conferring legislative competence on the Union Parliament for legislating on the subject of cow protection. Accordingly, a Constitution Amendment Bill seeking to bring the subject of prevention of cow slaughter on to the Concurrent List was introduced in the Lok Sabha on 18 May 1979. The Bill, however, lapsed on account of dissolution of the Sixth Lok Sabha. Bhave reiterated his demand for a total ban on cow slaughter in July 1980, while addressing the All India Goseva Sammelan. He also requested that cows should not be taken from one State to another.[196]

In 1981, the question of amending the Constitution by introducing a Bill was again examined by the Government, but, in view of the sensitive nature of the issue and owing to political compulsions a "wait and watch" policy was adopted. A number of complaints were received from time to time that despite the ban on the slaughter of cow and its progeny, healthy bullocks were being slaughtered under one pretext or the other and calves were being maimed, so that they could be declared useless and ultimately slaughtered.[196]

Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, in her letter dated 24 February 1982 wrote to the Chief Ministers of 14 States viz. Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Orissa, Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, and Jammu and Kashmir, in which she desired that the ban be enforced in letter and spirit, that the ban on cow slaughter is not allowed to be circumvented by devious methods, and that Committees to inspect cattle before they are admitted to slaughter houses be adopted.[196]

Recognizing that the problem basically arose on account of inaction or obstruction on the part of a few States and large scale smuggling of cows and calves from a prohibition State to a non-prohibition State like Kerala was taking place, a suggestion was made that this problem be brought to the notice of the Sarkaria Commission, which was making recommendations regarding Centre-State relations, but this idea was dropped as the commission was then in the final stages of report-writing.[196]

Legislation by State or Union Territory edit

The legal status of cattle slaughter in Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Lakshadweep is unknown.

Andhra Pradesh edit

The Andhra Pradesh Prohibition of Cow Slaughter and Animal Preservation Act, 1977 governs the slaughter of cattle (cows and buffaloes) in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. Therefore, the law governing the slaughter of cattle in Andhra Pradesh is the same as that in Telangana.

In the case of cows, the law makes a distinction between males and females. The slaughter of female cows and of heifers is totally forbidden. The slaughter of bulls and bullocks is permitted upon obtaining a "fit-for-slaughter" certificate, to be issued only if the animal is "not economical or is not likely to become economical for the purpose of breeding or draught/agricultural operations." The certificate can be issued by any veterinary doctor and is a source of much corruption and misuse. The law also prohibits the slaughter of calves, whether male or female. The age limit of "calf" is not defined.

In the case of buffaloes, the law firstly forbids in absolute terms the slaughter of calves, whether male or female. Again, the age limit of "calf" is not defined and therefore there is much misuse, resulting in the slaughter of many young male animals who are only a few months old. Secondly, the law forbids the slaughter of adult buffaloes unless a "fit-for-slaughter" certificate is issued by a veterinarian. The certificate can be issued if the animal is deemed "uneconomical for purposes of milking, breeding or draught/agricultural operations." Thus, the law permits the slaughter of all adult male buffaloes and of all old and "spent" female buffaloes whose milk yield is not economical. For this reason, the slaughter of buffaloes, both male and female, is rampant in Andhra Pradesh.

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable offence.[197]

Arunachal Pradesh edit

No ban on cattle slaughter.[198]

Assam edit

The Assam Cattle Preservation Act, 1950 governs the slaughter of cattle in Assam.

Slaughter of all cattle, including bulls, bullocks, cows, calves, male and female buffaloes and buffalo calves is prohibited. Slaughter of cattle is permitted on obtaining a "fit-for-slaughter" certificate, to be given if cattle is over 15 years of age or has become permanently incapacitated for work or breeding due to injury, deformity or any incurable disease.

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable offence.[197]

In 2021 Assam Assembly passed a bill that prohibits the slaughter or sale of beef within a 5-km radius of any temple. The legislation seeks to ensure that permission for slaughter is not granted to areas that are predominantly inhabited by Hindu, Jain, Sikh and other non-beef eating communities or places that fall within a 5-km radius of a temple, satra and any other institution as may be prescribed by the authorities. Exemptions, however, might be granted for certain religious occasions.[199][200]

Bihar edit

The Bihar Preservation and Improvement of Animals Act, 1955 governs the slaughter of cattle in Bihar.

Slaughter of cow and calf is totally prohibited. Slaughter of bulls or bullocks of over 25 years of age or permanently incapacitated for work or breeding due to injury, deformity or any incurable disease is permitted. The law also bans the export of cows, calves, bulls and bullocks from Bihar, for any purpose. The law defines a bull as "an uncastrated male of above 3 years", a bullock as "castrated male of above 3 years", a calf as "male or female below 3 years" and a cow as "female above 3 years".

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable offence.[197]

Chandigarh edit

The Punjab Prohibition of Cow Slaughter Act, 1955 applies to Chandigarh, Himachal Pradesh and Punjab. Therefore, the law governing the slaughter of cattle in Chandigarh has the same provisions as that in Himachal Pradesh and Punjab.

Slaughter of cow (includes bull, bullock, ox, heifer or calf), and its progeny, is totally illegal. The export of cattle for slaughter and the sale of beef are both illegal.[197] This "does not include flesh of cow contained in sealed containers and imported", meaning that restaurants in the states can serve beef, if they can prove its meat has been imported into the state. The law also excuses the killing of cows "by accident or in self defence".[201] Consumption is not penalized.[198] Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 2 years or fine up to 1,000 or both. The law places the burden of proof on the accused. The crime is treated as a cognizable and non-bailable offence.[197]

Chhattisgarh edit

"Chhattisgarh Agricultural Cattle Preservation Act, 2004" applies to the state. The operative sections of the Act prohibit slaughter of all agricultural cattle; possession of the beef of any agricultural cattle; and, transport of agricultural cattle ‘for the purpose of its slaughter… or with the knowledge that it will be or is likely to be, so slaughtered’. The Schedule lists Agricultural Cattle as: 1. Cows of all ages. 2. Calves of cows and of she buffaloes. 3. Bulls. 4. Bullocks. 5. Male and Female buffaloes.[202]

Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu edit

The Goa, Daman & Diu Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act, 1978 governs the slaughter of cattle in Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu.

Under the 1978 Act, which also applies to Goa, there is a total ban on slaughter of cow (includes cow, heifer or calf), except when the cow is suffering pain or contagious disease or for medical research. The law does not define the age of a "calf". There is also a total prohibition on the sale of beef or beef products in any form in the union territory.

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to 2 years or fine up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable and non-bailable offence.[197]

Delhi edit

The Delhi Agricultural Cattle Preservation Act, 1994 governs the slaughter of cattle in Delhi.

Slaughter of all agricultural cattle is totally prohibited. The law defines "agricultural cattle" as cows of all ages, calves of cows of all ages, and bulls and bullocks.[197] The slaughter of buffaloes is legal. The possession of the flesh of agricultural cattle slaughtered outside Delhi is also prohibited.[201] The transport or export of cattle for slaughter is also prohibited. Export for other purposes is permitted on declaration that cattle will not be slaughtered. However, export to a state where slaughter is not banned by law is not permitted.[197]

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to 5 years and fine up to 10,000, provided that minimum imprisonment should not be for less than 6 months and fine not less than 1,000. The law places the burden of proof on the accused. The crime is treated as a cognizable and non-bailable offence.[197]

Goa edit

The Goa, Daman & Diu Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act, 1978 and The Goa Animal Preservation Act, 1995 govern the slaughter of cattle in Goa.

Under the 1978 Act, which also applies to Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu, there is a total ban on slaughter of cow (includes cow, heifer or calf), except when the cow is suffering pain or contagious disease or for medical research. The law does not define the age of a "calf".

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to 2 years or fine up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable and non-bailable offence.This act though, has not been necessarily implemented.[203]

The Goa Animal Preservation Act, 1995 applies to bulls, bullocks, male calves and buffaloes of all ages. All the animals can be slaughtered on obtaining a "fit-for-slaughter" certificate which is not given if the animal is likely to become economical for draught, breeding or milk (in the case of she-buffaloes) purposes. The sale of beef obtained in contravention of the above provisions is prohibited. However, sale of beef imported from other states is legal.

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable offence.[197]

Gujarat edit

The Bombay Animal Preservation Act, 1954 governs the slaughter of cattle in Gujarat.

Slaughter of cows, calves of cows, bulls and bullocks is totally prohibited. Slaughter of buffaloes is permitted on certain conditions.

Anyone violating the law could be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable offence.[197]

The Gujarat Animal Preservation (Amendment) Act, 2011 was passed unopposed in the Gujarat Legislative Assembly, with support from the main opposition party, on 27 September 2011. The amendment, which came into effect in October 2011, criminalized transporting the animal for the purpose of slaughter and included a provision to confiscate the vehicle used for carrying cow meat. It also increased the maximum jail term for slaughtering cattle to 7 years and maximum fine to 50,000.[204][205][206]

In 2017, the Gujarat Assembly amended the bill further extending the punishment and fine. The punishment was increased to a minimum of 10 years and a maximum of 'life term of a 14 years', and the fine was enhanced to the range of ₹1 lakh – ₹5 lakh. The new law also made offences under the amended Act non-bailable.[207][208][209][210]

Haryana edit

Haryana Gauvansh Sanrakshan and Gausamvardhan Act, 2015 applies to Haryana.[211]

Earlier, "The Punjab Prohibition of Cow Slaughter Act, 1955" was the law governing the slaughter of cattle in Haryana has the same provisions as that in Chandigarh, Himachal Pradesh and Punjab. However, Haryana has stricter penalties for violating the law than the other two states and Chandigarh, even prior to 2015 Act.

Slaughter of cow (includes bull, bullock, ox, heifer or calf), and its progeny, is "totally prohibited". The export of cattle for slaughter and the sale of beef are both prohibited.[197] This "does not include flesh of cow contained in sealed containers and imported", meaning that restaurants in the states can serve beef, if they can prove its meat has been imported into the state. The law also excuses the killing of cows "by accident or in self defence".[201] Consumption of beef is not penalized.[198]

Anyone violating the law can be punished with rigorous imprisonment up to 10 years or fine up to 1 lakh or both. The law places the burden of proof on the accused. The crime is treated as a cognizable and non-bailable offence.[197][211]

Himachal Pradesh edit

The Punjab Prohibition of Cow Slaughter Act, 1955 applies to Chandigarh, Himachal Pradesh and Punjab. Therefore, the law governing the slaughter of cattle in Himachal Pradesh is the same as that in Chandigarh and Punjab.

Slaughter of cow (includes bull, bullock, ox, heifer or calf), and its progeny, is totally prohibited. The export of cattle for slaughter and the sale of beef are both prohibited.

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 2 years or fine up to 1,000 or both. The law places the burden of proof on the accused. The crime is treated as a cognizable and non-bailable offence.[197]

Jammu and Kashmir edit

The Ranbir Penal Code, 1932 governed the slaughter of cattle in Jammu and Kashmir which is now repealed.

Voluntary slaughter of any bovine animal such as ox, bull, cow or calf shall be punished with imprisonment of either description which may extend to 10 years and shall also be liable to fine. The fine may extend to 5 times the price of the animals slaughtered as determined by the court. Possession of the flesh of slaughtered animals is also an offence punishable with imprisonment up to 1 year and fine up to 500.[197]

In 2019, the 150 year old ban on cow slaughter was lifted, an unexpected result of the end of the special status of Kashmir and Ladakh. The move to re-criminalise beef consumption and sale on the grounds of environmental activism in India, was overturned by the High Court of Kashmir.[212][32][213][214]

Jharkhand edit

The Bihar Preservation and Improvement of Animals Act, 1955 governs the slaughter of cattle in Jharkhand.

Slaughter of cow and calf is totally prohibited. Slaughter of bulls or bullocks of over 15 years of age or permanently incapacitated for work or breeding due to injury, deformity or any incurable disease is permitted. The law also bans the export of cows, calves, bulls and bullocks from Jharkhand for any purpose. The law defines a bull as "an uncastrated male of above 3 years", a bullock as "castrated male of above 3 years", a calf as "male or female below 3 years" and a cow as "female above 3 years".

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable offence.[197]

Karnataka edit

The Karnataka Prevention of Cow Slaughter and Cattle Preservation Act, 1964 governed the slaughter of cattle in Karnataka until 2020 and was replaced by The Karnataka Prevention of Slaughter and Preservation of Cattle Act, 2020.[215] In 2010, the Karnataka Prevention of Slaughter and Preservation of Cattle Act, 2010 and in 2014, the Karnataka Prevention of Slaughter and Preservation of Cattle Act (Amendment), 2014 were introduced by subsequently withdrawn.[215]

Up to 2020, the slaughter of cow, calf of a cow (male or female) or calf of a she-buffalo totally prohibited. Slaughter of bulls, bullocks and adult buffaloes was permitted on obtaining a "fit-for-slaughter" certificate provided cattle is over 12 years of age or is permanently incapacitated for breeding, draught or milk due to injury, deformity or any other cause. Transport for slaughter to a place outside the state not permitted. Sale, purchase or disposal of a cow or a calf, for slaughter, is not permitted.

Up to 2020 anyone violating the law could be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of six months or fine of up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable offence.[197]

In January 2021, the Karnataka Prevention of Slaughter and Preservation of Cattle Act, 2020 became official. This act applied to any breed of cattle up to twelve years of age.[216]

With the act, people found guilty of breaking the law would receive a prison sentence of 3 to 7 years. People found guilty would also receive a monetary fine between 50,000 rupees to 10 lakh depending on the number of times of breaking this law.[217]

Only Buffaloes thirteen years and older are exempted from this law. Buffaloes that can not produce milk or reproduce are also exempted.[218]

Kerala edit

Kerala permits the slaughter of every type of cattle. Slaughtering of animals is formally regulated by the government in order to maintain public health and sanitation. Panchayat laws permit slaughter only in approved slaughter houses.[219] Beef accounts for 25% of all meat consumed in Kerala.[220] Beef is sold at meat shops while cattle is traded at weekly markets across the state.[221] Further, it has been ruled an obligation of panchayat to provide for meat stalls, including those that may sell beef.[222]

Ladakh edit

The Ranbir Penal Code, 1932 governed the slaughter of cattle in Ladakh which is now repealed and has not been replaced by any new law.

Voluntary slaughter of any bovine animal such as ox, bull, cow or calf shall be punished with imprisonment of either description which may extend to 10 years and shall also be liable to fine. The fine may extend to 5 times the price of the animals slaughtered as determined by the court. Possession of the flesh of slaughtered animals is also an offence punishable with imprisonment up to 1 year and fine up to 500.[197]

Madhya Pradesh edit

The Madhya Pradesh Agricultural Cattle Preservation Act, 1959 governs the slaughter of cattle in Madhya Pradesh.

Slaughter of cows, calves of cows, bulls, bullocks and buffalo calves is prohibited. However, bulls and bullocks are being slaughtered in the light of a Supreme Court judgement, provided the cattle is over 20[223] years or has become unfit for work or breeding. Transport or export of cattle for slaughter not permitted. Export for any purpose to another State where cow slaughter is not banned by law is not permitted. The sale, purchase and/or disposal of cow and its progeny and possession of flesh of cattle is prohibited.

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 3 years and fine of 5,000 or both. Normally imprisonment shall not be less than 6 months and fine not less than 1,000. The law places the burden of proof on the accused. The crime is treated as a cognizable offence.[197]

Maharashtra edit

The Maharashtra Animal Preservation Act, 1976 governs the slaughter of cattle in Maharashtra.

Slaughter of cows (includes a heifer or male or female calf of a cow) is totally prohibited.[224] Slaughter of bulls, bullocks and buffaloes is allowed on obtaining a "fit-for-slaughter certificate", if it is not likely to become economical for draught, breeding or milk (in the case of she-buffaloes) purposes.

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 6 months and a fine of up to 1,000. The law places the burden of proof on the accused. The crime is treated as a cognizable offence.[197] Maharashtra cow slaughter ban was later extended to ban the sale and export of beef, with a punishment of 5 years jail, and/or a 10,000 fine for possession or sale.[225][226] This law came into effect from 2 March 2015.[227]

Manipur edit

In Manipur, cattle slaughter is restricted under a proclamation by the Maharaja in the Durbar Resolution of 1939. The proclamation states, "According to Hindu religion the killing of cow is a sinful act. It is also against Manipuri Custom."[197] However, beef is largely consumed in the hill districts with large Christian populations and sold openly in cities like Churachandpur.[221]

Meghalaya edit

No ban on cattle slaughter, beef consumed widely.[197]

Mizoram edit

No ban on cattle slaughter, beef consumed widely.[198]

Nagaland edit

No ban on cattle slaughter, beef consumed widely.[197]

Odisha edit

The Orissa Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act, 1960 governs the slaughter of cattle in Odisha.

Slaughter of cows (includes heifer or calf) is totally prohibited. Slaughter of bulls and bullocks is permitted, on obtaining a "fit-for-slaughter" certificate, provided that the cattle is over 14 years of age or has become permanently unfit for breeding or draught.

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 2 years or fine up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable offence.[197]

Puducherry edit

The Pondicherry Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act, 1968 governs the slaughter of cattle in Puducherry.

Slaughter of cows (includes heifer or calf) is totally prohibited. Slaughter of bulls and bullocks is permitted, on obtaining a "fit-for-slaughter" certificate, provided that the cattle is over age of 15 years or has become permanently unfit for breeding or draught. The sale and/or transport of beef is prohibited.

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 2 years or fine up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable and non-bailable offence.[197]

Punjab edit

The Punjab Prohibition of Cow Slaughter Act, 1955 applies to Chandigarh, Himachal Pradesh and Punjab. Therefore, the law governing the slaughter of cattle in Punjab has the same provisions as that in Chandigarh and Himachal Pradesh.

Slaughter of cow (includes bull, bullock, ox, heifer or calf), and its progeny, is totally illegal. The export of cattle for slaughter and the sale of beef are both illegal.[197] This "does not include flesh of cow contained in sealed containers and imported", meaning that restaurants in the states can serve beef, if they can prove its meat has been imported into the state. The law also excuses the killing of cows "by accident or in self defense".[201] Consumption is not penalized.[198] Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 2 years or fine up to 1,000 or both. The law places the burden of proof on the accused. The crime is treated as a cognizable and non-bailable offence.[197]

Rajasthan edit

The Rajasthan Bovine Animal (Prohibition of Slaughter and Regulation of Temporary Migration or Export) Act, 1995 governs the slaughter of cattle in Rajasthan.

Slaughter of all bovine animals (includes cow, calf, heifer, bull or bullocks) is prohibited. Possession, sale and/or transport of beef and beef products is prohibited. The export of bovine animals for slaughter is prohibited. The law requires custody of seized animals to be given to any recognized voluntary animal welfare agency failing which to any Goshala, Gosadan or a suitable person who volunteers to maintain the animal. Government of Rajasthan has also introduced a Bill (Bill No. 16/2015) to ban migration out of State and slaughter of Camels in the State.[228]

Anyone violating the law can be punished with rigorous imprisonment of not less than 1 year and up to a maximum of 2 years and fine up to 10,000. The law places the burden of proof on the accused.[197]

Sikkim edit

Under The Sikkim Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act, 2017, cow slaughter is a non-bailable offence in Sikkim.[198]

Tamil Nadu edit

The Tamil Nadu Animal Preservation Act, 1958 governs the slaughter of cattle in Tamil Nadu.

All animals may be slaughtered upon obtaining a "fit-for-slaughter" certificate. The law defines "animals" as bulls, bullocks, cows, calves; and buffaloes of all ages. The certificate is issued when an animal is over 10 years of age, unfit for labor, breeding or had become permanently incapacitated for work and breeding due to injury deformity or any incurable disease.

Anyone violating the Act can be punished with imprisonment of up to 3 years or fine up to 1,000 or both.[197]

Telangana edit

The Andhra Pradesh Prohibition of Cow Slaughter and Animal Preservation Act, 1977 governs the slaughter of cattle in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. Therefore, the law governing the slaughter of cattle in Telangana is the same as that in Andhra Pradesh.

Slaughter of cows (includes heifer, or a calf, whether male or female of a cow) is prohibited. The law does not define the age of a "calf". Slaughter of bulls and bullocks is allowed on obtaining a "fit-for-slaughter" certificate, to be given only if the animal is not economical or is not likely to become economical for the purpose of breeding or draught/agricultural operations.

Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable offence.[197]

Tripura edit

There exists, as of 2018, no ban on cattle slaughter in Tripura.[229] The consumption of beef, however, has been historically rather limited due to religious and cultural reasons given that the erstwhile Princely State of Tripura used to be under the rule of the Hindu Manikya Kings during the British Raj and emerged as an overwhelmingly Hindu-majority state after the partition of Bengal into East Bengal (now Bangladesh) and West Bengal, India. Tripura is now a Bengali Hindu majority state.

Uttar Pradesh edit

The Uttar Pradesh Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act, 1955 governs the slaughter of cattle in Uttar Pradesh.

Slaughter of cow (includes a heifer and calf) is totally prohibited. Transport of cow outside the State for slaughter is not permitted. The sale of beef is prohibited. The law defines "beef" as the flesh of cow and of such bull or bullock whose slaughter is prohibited under the Act, but does not include such flesh contained in sealed containers and imported into Uttar Pradesh.

Anyone violating the Act can be punished with rigorous imprisonment of up to 2 years or fine up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable and non-bailable offence.[197]

The Act permitted the slaughter of bull or bullock on obtaining a "fit-for-slaughter" certificate provided it was over the age of 15 years or had become permanently unfit for breeding, draught and any agricultural operations.[197] However, the Government of Uttar Pradesh issued an ordinance in 2001, prohibiting the slaughter of cow and its progeny.[180]

On 6 June 2017, Uttar Pradesh's Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath directed the state police to take action against cow slaughter and cattle smuggling under the National Security Act and the Gangster Act.[230]

Uttarakhand edit

The Uttar Pradesh Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act, 1955 governs the slaughter of cattle in Uttarakhand.

Slaughter of cow (includes a heifer and calf) is totally prohibited. Transport of cow outside the State for slaughter is not permitted. The sale of beef is prohibited. The law defines "beef" as the flesh of cow and of such bull or bullock whose slaughter is prohibited under the Act, but does not include such flesh contained in sealed containers and imported into Uttarakhand.

Anyone violating the Act can be punished with rigorous imprisonment of up to 2 years or fine up to 1,000 or both. The crime is treated as a cognizable and non-bailable offence.[197]

West Bengal edit

In West Bengal, there is no ban on the consumption of beef or slaughter if carried out in government or municipal slaughterhouses after a certificate from a veterinarian. The Animal Slaughter Control Act, 2009 exempts slaughter for religious purposes, however the Supreme Court has stated that such exemptions are illegal in India.[198]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The protection of cattle and prevention of cattle slaughter is not limited to Buddhists in India, but found in other Theravada countries such as Sri Lanka, Myanmar and others.[80][81]
  2. ^ A wealthy banker, gold merchant and Jain devotee Shantidas Jhaveri complained to Shah Jahan, who asked his son Aurangzeb to return the building.[100] Later Aurangzeb overthrew his father from his throne, placed him into house arrest and assumed the power as the Emperor.[102]
  3. ^ In rice-growing regions, buffalo is important because buffalo pull better in water-filled muddy soils.[153]

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Further reading edit

  • Marvin Harris. Good to Eat: Riddles of Food and Culture. Waveland Press.
  • Michael Charles Tobias. World War III: Population and the Biosphere at the End of the Millennium. Bear & Co., 1994, Second Edition, Continuum.
  • The British Origin of Cow-slaughter in India By Dharampal, T. M. Mukundan. Society for Integrated Development of Himalayas, Mussourie. 2002. ISBN 8187827041

External links edit

  • Department of Animal Husbandry, Dairying and Fisheries – Report of the National Commission on Cattle (July 2002) 28 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • Various Committees on Cattle, Government of India

cattle, slaughter, india, especially, slaughter, controversial, because, cattle, status, endeared, respected, living, beings, adherents, dharmic, religions, like, hinduism, jainism, buddhism, sikhism, while, being, acceptable, source, meat, muslims, christians. Cattle slaughter in India especially cow slaughter is controversial because of cattle s status as endeared and respected living beings to adherents of Dharmic religions like Hinduism Jainism Buddhism and Sikhism 2 3 4 5 6 while being an acceptable source of meat for Muslims Christians and Jews 7 8 9 10 11 Cow slaughter has been shunned for a number of reasons specifically because of the cow s association with the god Krishna in Hinduism and because cattle have been an integral part of rural livelihoods as an economic necessity 12 13 14 Cattle slaughter has also been opposed by various Indian religions because of the ethical principle of Ahimsa non violence and the belief in the unity of all life 15 16 17 18 Legislation against cattle slaughter is in place throughout most states and territories of India 18 India s beef industry is predominantly based on the slaughter of domesticated water buffaloes or carabeef 1 On 26 October 2005 the Supreme Court of India in a landmark judgement upheld the constitutional validity of anti cow slaughter laws enacted by various state governments of India 19 20 21 22 20 out of 28 states in India had various laws regulating the act of slaughtered cow prohibiting the slaughter or sale of cows 23 24 25 26 27 Goa Daman and Diu Dadra and Nagar Haveli Pondicherry Kerala Arunachal and the other Seven Sister States and West Bengal are the places where there are no restrictions on cow slaughter 28 29 30 31 The ban in Kashmir was lifted in 2019 32 As per existing meat export policy in India the export of beef meat of cow oxen and calf is prohibited 33 Bone in meat carcass half carcass of buffalo is also prohibited and is not permitted to be exported Only the boneless meats of buffalo goat sheep and birds are permitted for export 34 35 India feels that the restriction on export to only boneless meat with a ban on meat with bones will add to the brand image of Indian meat Animal carcasses are subjected to maturation for at least 24 hours before deboning Subsequent heat processing during the bone removal operation is believed to be sufficient to kill the virus causing foot and mouth disease 36 The laws governing cattle slaughter in India vary greatly from state to state The Preservation protection and improvement of stock and prevention of animal diseases veterinary training and practice is Entry 15 of the State List of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution meaning that State legislatures have exclusive powers to legislate the prevention of slaughter and preservation of cattle Some states permit the slaughter of cattle with restrictions like a fit for slaughter certificate which may be issued depending on factors like age and sex of cattle continued economic viability etc Others completely ban cattle slaughter while there is no restriction in a few states 37 On 26 May 2017 the Ministry of Environment of the Government of India led by Bharatiya Janata Party imposed a ban on the sale and purchase of cattle for slaughter at animal markets across India under Prevention of Cruelty to Animals statutes 38 39 although Supreme Court of India suspended the ban on sale of cattle in its judgement in July 2017 40 giving relief to beef and leather industries 41 According to a 2016 United States Department of Agriculture review India has rapidly grown to become the world s largest beef exporter accounting for 20 of world s beef trade based on its large water buffalo meat processing industry 1 Surveys of cattle slaughter operations in India have reported hygiene and ethics concerns 42 43 According to United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization and European Union India beef consumption per capita per year is the world s lowest amongst the countries it surveyed 44 India produced 3 643 million metric tons of beef in 2012 of which 1 963 million metric tons was consumed domestically and 1 680 million metric tons was exported According to a 2012 report India ranks fifth in the world in beef production and seventh in domestic consumption 45 The Indian government requires mandatory microbiological and other testing of exported beef 46 Contents 1 History 1 1 Indian religions 1 1 1 Hinduism 1 1 2 Jainism 1 1 3 Buddhism 1 2 Islam 1 3 Christianity 1 4 Mughal Empire 1 5 Maratha Empire 1 6 Sikh Empire 2 British rule 2 1 Post Independence 3 Contemporary issues 3 1 Hygiene 3 2 Illegal slaughterhouses and cattle theft 3 3 Castes and religions 3 4 Economic imperative 3 5 Animal cruelty 3 6 Vigilantism 3 7 Stray cattle 4 Legislation 4 1 Non uniformity 4 2 Legislative history 4 2 1 Constituent Assembly 4 2 2 Parliament 5 Legislation by State or Union Territory 5 1 Andhra Pradesh 5 2 Arunachal Pradesh 5 3 Assam 5 4 Bihar 5 5 Chandigarh 5 6 Chhattisgarh 5 7 Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu 5 8 Delhi 5 9 Goa 5 10 Gujarat 5 11 Haryana 5 12 Himachal Pradesh 5 13 Jammu and Kashmir 5 14 Jharkhand 5 15 Karnataka 5 16 Kerala 5 17 Ladakh 5 18 Madhya Pradesh 5 19 Maharashtra 5 20 Manipur 5 21 Meghalaya 5 22 Mizoram 5 23 Nagaland 5 24 Odisha 5 25 Puducherry 5 26 Punjab 5 27 Rajasthan 5 28 Sikkim 5 29 Tamil Nadu 5 30 Telangana 5 31 Tripura 5 32 Uttar Pradesh 5 33 Uttarakhand 5 34 West Bengal 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editFor a discussion on religious views towards cattle see Cattle in religion and mythology Indian religions edit The majority of scholars explain the veneration for cattle among Hindus in economic terms which includes the importance of dairy in the diet use of cow dung as fuel and fertilizer and the importance that cattle have historically played in agriculture 47 Ancient texts such as Rig Veda Puranas highlight the importance of the cattle 47 The scope extent and status of cows throughout during ancient India is a subject of debate According to D N Jha s 2009 work The Myth of the Holy Cow for example cows and other cattle were neither inviolable nor revered in the ancient times as they were later 48 49 Grihya sutra recommends that beef be eaten by the mourners after a funeral ceremony as a ritual rite of passage 50 According to Marvin Harris the Vedic literature is contradictory with some suggesting ritual slaughter and meat consumption while others suggesting a taboo on meat eating 51 nbsp A 2nd century CE sculpture of Nandi bull It is a sacred symbol in Shaivism tradition of Hinduism The protection of animal life was championed by Jainism on the grounds that violence against life forms is a source of suffering in the universe and a human being creates bad karma by violence against any living being 52 The Chandogya Upanishad mentions the ethical value of Ahimsa or non violence towards all beings 52 53 By mid 1st millennium BCE all three major Indian religions Hinduism Jainism and Buddhism were championing non violence as an ethical value and something that affected one s rebirth According to Harris by about 200 CE food and feasting on animal slaughter were widely considered as a form of violence against life forms and became a religious and social taboo 14 51 Ralph Fitch a gentleman merchant of London and one of the earliest English travellers to India wrote a letter home in 1580 stating They have a very strange order among them they worship a cow and esteem much of the cow s dung to paint the walls of their houses They eat no flesh but live by roots and rice and milk 54 The cow has been a symbol of wealth in India since ancient times 55 Hinduism edit nbsp A goat being slaughtered at Kali Puja painting by an Indian artist Dated between 1800 and 1899 Inscription on verso A Hindoo sacrifice nbsp KamadhenuThe neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message According to Nanditha Krishna the cow veneration in ancient India during the Vedic era the religious texts written during this period called for non violence towards all bipeds and quadrupeds and often equated killing of a cow with the killing of a human being specifically a Brahmin 56 Nanditha Krishna stated that the hymn 8 3 25 of the Hindu scripture Atharvaveda 1200 1500 BCE condemns all killings of men cattle and horses and prays to god Agni to punish those who kill 57 58 nbsp The iconography of popular Hindu deity Krishna often includes cows He is revered in Vaishnavism According to Harris the literature relating to cow veneration became common in 1st millennium CE and by about 1000 CE vegetarianism along with a taboo against beef became a well accepted mainstream Hindu tradition 51 This practice was inspired by the belief in Hinduism that a soul is present in all living beings life in all its forms is interconnected and non violence towards all creatures is the highest ethical value 14 51 Vegetarianism is a part of the Hindu culture God Krishna one of the incarnations Avatar of Vishnu is associated with cows adding to its endearment 14 51 Study shows ancient Hindus ate meat heavy food 59 Many ancient and medieval Hindu texts debate the rationale for a voluntary stop to cow slaughter and the pursuit of vegetarianism as a part of a general abstention from violence against others and all killing of animals 60 61 Some significant debates between pro non vegetarianism and pro vegetarianism with mention of cattle meat as food is found in several books of the Hindu epic the Mahabharata particularly its Book III XII XIII and XIV 60 It is also found in the Ramayana 61 These two epics are not only literary classics but they have also been popular religious classics 62 The Mahabharata debate presents one meat producing hunter who defends his profession as dharmic 60 The hunter in this ancient Sanskrit text states that meat consumption should be okay because animal sacrifice was practiced in the Vedic age that the flesh nourishes people that man must eat to live and plants like animals are alive too that the nature of life is such every life form eats the other that no profession is totally non violent because even agriculture destroys numerous living beings when the plough digs the land 60 The hunter s arguments are states Alsdorf followed by stanzas that present support for restricted meat eating on specific occasions 60 The pro vegetarianism sections of these Hindu texts counter these views One section acknowledges that the Vedas do mention sacrifice but not killing the animal The proponents of vegetarianism state that Vedic teachings explicitly teach against killing its verses can be interpreted in many ways that the correct interpretation is of the sacrifice as the interiorized spiritual sacrifice one where it is an offering of truth satya and self restraint damah with the proper sacrifice being one with reverence as the sacrificial meal and Veda study as the herbal juices 63 64 The sections that appeal for vegetarianism including abstention from cow slaughter state that life forms exist in different levels of development some life forms have more developed sensory organs that non violence towards fellow man and animals who experience pain and suffering is an appropriate ethical value It states that one s guiding principle should be conscientious atmaupamya literally to respect others as oneself 60 According to Ludwig Alsdorf Indian vegetarianism is unequivocally based on ahimsa non violence as evidenced by ancient smritis and other ancient texts of Hinduism He adds that the endearment and respect for cattle in Hinduism is more than a commitment to vegetarianism it has become integral to its theology 65 According to Juli Gittinger it is often argued that cow sacredness and protection is a fundamental quality of Hinduism but she considers this to be a false claim 66 This states Gittinger could be understood more as an example of sanskritization or presentation of certain traditions followed by its upper castes as purer informed form of Hinduism and possibly an influence of Jainism on Hinduism 66 The respect for cattle is widespread but not universal Some Hindus Shaktism practice animal sacrifice and eat meat certain festivals According to Christopher Fuller animal sacrifices have been rare among the Hindus outside a few eastern states and Himalayan regions of the Indian subcontinent 65 67 To the majority of modern Indians states Alsdorf respect for cattle and disrespect for slaughter is a part of their ethos and there is no ahimsa without renunciation of meat consumption 65 Jainism edit Jainism is against violence to all living beings including cattle According to the Jaina sutras humans must avoid all killing and slaughter because all living beings are fond of life they suffer they feel pain they like to live and long to live All beings should help each other live and prosper according to Jainism not kill and slaughter each other 68 69 In the Jain tradition neither monks nor laypersons should cause others or allow others to work in a slaughterhouse 70 Jains believe that vegetarian sources can provide adequate nutrition without creating suffering for animals such as cattle 70 According to some Jain scholars slaughtering cattle increases ecological burden from human food demands since the production of meat entails intensified grain demands and reducing cattle slaughter by 50 percent would free up enough land and ecological resources to solve all malnutrition and hunger worldwide The Jain community leaders states Christopher Chapple has actively campaigned to stop all forms of animal slaughter including cattle 71 Jains have led a historic campaign to ban the slaughter of cows and all other animals particularly during their annual festival of Paryushana also called Daslakshana by the Digambara 72 Historical records for example state that the Jain leaders lobbied Mughal emperors to ban slaughter of cattles and other animals during this 8 to 12 day period In some cases such as during the 16th century rule of Akbar they were granted their request and an edict was issued by Akbar Jahangir revoked the ban upon coronation reinstated it in 1610 when Jain community approached and appealed to him then later reversed the 1610 ban with a new edict 73 74 Buddhism edit The texts of Buddhism state ahimsa to be one of five ethical precepts which requires a practicing Buddhist to refrain from killing living beings 75 Slaughtering cow has been a taboo with some texts suggest taking care of a cow is a means of taking care of all living beings Cattle is seen as a form of reborn human beings in the endless rebirth cycles in samsara protecting animal life and being kind to cattle and other animals is good karma 75 76 The Buddhist texts state that killing or eating meat is wrong and they urge Buddhist laypersons to not operate slaughterhouses nor trade in meat 77 78 79 Indian Buddhist texts encourage a plant based diet 14 51 Saving animals from slaughter for meat is believed in Buddhism to be a way to acquire merit for better rebirth 76 According to Richard Gombrich there has been a gap between Buddhist precepts and practice Vegetarianism is admired states Gombrich but often it is not practiced Nevertheless adds Gombrich there is a general belief among Theravada Buddhists that eating beef is worse than other meat and the ownership of cattle slaughterhouses by Buddhists is relatively rare 80 note 1 Islam edit Cattle in medieval India Hindus like early Christians and Manichaeans forbade the killing and eating of meat of cows Abu Rayḥan Al Biruni 1017 1030 CEPersian visitor to India 82 83 With the arrival of Islamic rule as the Delhi Sultanate in the 12th century Islamic dietary practices entered India According to the verses of the Quran such as 16 5 8 and 23 21 23 God created cattle to benefit man and recommends Muslims to eat cattle meat but forbids pork 84 Cattle slaughter had been and continued to be a religiously approved practice among the Muslim rulers and the followers of Islam particularly on festive occasions such as the Eid al Adha 84 85 The earliest texts on the invasion of the Indian subcontinent mention the cow slaughter taboo and its use by Muslim army commanders as a political message by committing the taboo inside temples 86 For example in the early 11th century narrative of Al Biruni the story of 8th century Muhammad bin Qasim conquest of Multan is mentioned In this Al Biruni narrative according to Manan Ahmed Asif a historian of Islam in South and Southeast Asia Qasim first asserts the superiority of Islam over the polytheists by committing a taboo killing a cow and publicly soiling the idol giving the cow meat as an offering before allowing the temple to continue as a place of worship 86 In the early 13th century Persian text of Chach Nama the defending fort residents call the attacking Muslims in rage as Chandalas and cow eaters but adds Andre Wink the text is silent about cow worship 87 In the texts of court historians of the Delhi Sultanate and later the Mughal Empire cow slaughter taboo in India is mentioned as well as cow slaughter as a means of political message desecration as well as its prohibition by Sultans and Muslim Emperors as a means of accommodation of public sentiments in the Indian subcontinent 88 89 90 In 1756 57 in what was his fourth invasion of India the founder of the Durrani Empire Ahmad Shah Durrani sacked Delhi and plundered Agra Mathura and Vrindavan 91 On his way back to Afghanistan he attacked the Golden Temple in Amritsar and filled its sacred pool with the blood of slaughtered cows 92 While most Muslims consider cattle to be a source of religiously acceptable meat some Muslim Sufi sects of India practiced vegetarianism 93 Christianity edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message European memoirs on cattle in India They would not kill an animal on any account not even a fly or a flea or a louse or anything in fact that has life for they say these have all souls and it would be sin to do so Marco Polo III 20 13th centuryVenetian traveler to India 94 Christianity is one of India s largest religions after Hinduism and Islam with approximately 28 million followers constituting 2 3 percent of India s population 2011 census According to legend the Christian faith was introduced to India by Thomas the Apostle who supposedly reached the Malabar Coast Kerala in 52 AD Later Christianity also arrived on the Indian sea coast with Christian travelers and merchants Christians are a significant minority and a major religious group in three states of India Meghalaya Mizoram and Nagaland with a plural majority in Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh and other states with significant Christian population include Coastal Andhra Tamil Nadu Kerala Kanara the south shore and North east India Christians in India especially the Saint Thomas Christians of Kerala to an extent follow Hindu practices Moreover a significant number of Indians profess personal Christian faith outside the domain of traditional and institutionalized Christianity and do not associate with any Church or its conventional code of belief In Christianity no dietary restrictions exists and any kind of meat has been eaten across Christian followers in different parts of India for centuries 95 nbsp Saint Luke the Evangelist The bull is an ancient Christian symbol of redemption and life through sacrifice signifying Luke s records of Christ as a priest and his ultimate sacrifice for the future of humanity Mughal Empire edit nbsp A pamphlet protesting cow slaughter first created in 1893 A meat eater mansahari is shown as a demon with sword with a man telling him don t kill cow is life source for all Part of a series by Raja Ravi Varma Redrawn with demon c 1897 96 Cattle slaughter in accordance with the Islamic custom was practiced in the Mughal Empire under its Sunni rulers Despite cow slaughter not being a crime states Muhammad Mahbubur Rahman no one dared publicly to slaughter cows particularly in Hindu dominated areas as people could instantly punish the culprit 97 The Mughal emperor Humayun opposed cow slaughter and refused to eat beef in an incident as cited by Jouher after the killing of cows in a Hindu territory by his soldiers led to clashes in the Tezkereh al Vakiat Though historians doubt translation capabilities of Tezkereh al Vakiat by a British officer Major Charles Stewart there is enough hint that the early Mughal emperors were averse to cow slaughter for beef 98 During Akbar s reign there was a strict ban on cow slaughter This was followed by his son Jehangir and then Shah Jahan as well 99 It is well known that emperor Aurangzeb followed a hard line against Hindus In 1645 soon after being appointed Governor of Gujarat by Shah Jahan Aurangzeb desecrated the Chintamani Parshvanath Jain temple near Sarashpur Gujarat by killing a cow inside the Jain temple and lopping off the noses of the statues and converting it into a mosque calling it the Might of Islam 100 101 note 2 In present day Punjab a Hindu delegation to the 9th Sikh guru Guru Tegh Bahadur requested him to ban cow slaughter and told him Cows are everywhere being slaughtered If any cow or buffalo belonging to a Hindu is mortally ill the Qazi comes and kills it on the spot Muslims then flay it cut it in pieces and carry it away This causes us much distress If we fail to inform the Qazi when a beast is dying he punishes us saying Why did you not tell me Now its spirit has gone to hell whereas had it been killed in the approved Muslim manner its spirit would have gone to paradise 103 99 Experts however doubt that Aurangzeb would have lifted the ban on cow slaughter enforced by his predecessors Even during later Mughal period there are documented references about the ban During Emperor Farrukhsiyar s rule for instance there is documentary evidence of a royal trial over accusations of cow slaughter There are references though that the ban would be relaxed during Bakr Id 99 Maratha Empire edit According to Ian Copland and other scholars the Maratha Empire which led a Hindu rebellion against the Muslim Mughal Empire and created a Hindu state in the 17th and 18th centuries respected mosques mausoleums and Sufi pirs 104 verification needed However the Maratha polity sharply enforced the Hindu sentiments for cow protection This may be linked to the Bhakti movement that developed before the rise of the Maratha Empire states Copland where legends and a theology based on the compassion and love stories of Hindu god Krishna himself a cowherd became integral to regional religiosity 104 The Mahratha confederacy adopted the same approach with Portuguese Christians in the Western Ghats and the peninsular coastal regions verification needed Marathas were liberal citation needed state Copland and others who they respected Christian priests allowed the building of churches and gave state land to Christian causes However cattle protection expected by the Hindu majority was the state norm which Portuguese Christians were required to respect 105 additional citation s needed Sikh Empire edit Cow slaughter was banned by Maharajah Ranjit Singh the founder of the Sikh Empire in Punjab This was not due to the beliefs of Sikhs 106 Many butcher houses were banned and restrictions were put on the slaughter of cow and sale of beef in the Sikh Empire 107 as following the traditions cow was as sacred to the Hindus 108 During the Sikh reign cow slaughter was a capital offence for which perpetrators were even executed 106 109 British rule editSee also Cow protection movement With the advent of British rule in India eating beef along with drinking whiskey as it was part of their food culture in English language colleges in Bengal became a method of fitting in into the British culture Some Hindus in the 1830s consumed beef to show how they derided irrational Hindu customs according to Barbara Metcalf and Thomas Metcalf 110 The reverence for the cow played a role in the Indian Rebellion of 1857 against the British East India Company Hindu and Muslim sepoys in the army of the East India Company came to believe that their paper cartridges which held a measured amount of gunpowder were greased with cow and pig fat as it was the best and easily accessible method available at that time for greasing weapons since cattle and pigs had a good amount of fat in them Historians argue that the symbol of the cow was used as a means of mobilizing Hindus 111 In 1870 the Namdhari Sikhs started the Kuka Revolution revolting against the British and seeking to protect the cows from slaughter A few years later Swami Dayananda Saraswati called for the stoppage of cow slaughter by the British and suggested the formation of Go samvardhani Sabhas 112 In the 1870s cow protection movements spread rapidly in Punjab North West Frontier Province Oudh State now Awadh and Rohilkhand The Arya Samaj had a tremendous role in skillfully converting this sentiment into a national movement 111 The first Gaurakshini sabha cow protection society was established in the Punjab in 1882 113 The movement spread rapidly all over North India and to Bengal Bombay Madras presidencies and Central Provinces The organization rescued wandering cows and reclaimed them to groom them in places called gaushalas cow refuges Charitable networks developed all through North India to collect rice from individuals pool the contributions and re sell them to fund the gaushalas Signatures up to 350 000 in some places were collected to demand a ban on cow sacrifice 114 Between 1880 and 1893 hundreds of gaushalas were opened 112 nbsp cow and its calf in a Hindu templeCow protection sentiment reached its peak in 1893 Large public meetings were held in Nagpur Haridwar and Benares to denounce beef eaters Melodramas were conducted to display the plight of cows and pamphlets were distributed to create awareness among those who sacrificed and ate them Riots broke out between Hindus and Muslims in Mau in the Azamgarh district it took 3 days for the government to regain control However Muslims had interpreted this as a promise of protection for those who wanted to perform sacrifices 115 The series of violent incidences spelling also resulted in a riot in Bombay involving the working classes and unrest occurred in places as far away as Rangoon Burma An estimated thirty one to forty five communal riots broke out over six months and a total of 107 people were killed 114 116 Queen Victoria mentioned the cow protection movement in a letter dated 8 December 1893 to then Viceroy Lansdowne writing The Queen greatly admired the Viceroy s speech on the Cow killing agitation While she quite agrees in the necessity of perfect fairness she thinks the Muhammadans do require more protection than Hindus and they are decidedly by far the more loyal Though the Muhammadan s cow killing is made the pretext for the agitation it is in fact directed against us who kill far more cows for our army amp c than the Muhammadans 112 Cow slaughter was opposed by some prominent leaders of the independence movement such as Mahatma Gandhi Bal Gangadhar Tilak Lala Lajpat Rai Madan Mohan Malviya Rajendra Prasad and Purushottam Das Tandon They supported a ban on cattle slaughter once India gained its independence from the colonial British 117 Gandhi supported cow protection and opposed cow slaughter 118 119 explaining the reverence for cow in March 1945 120 Gandhi supported the leather industry but stated that slaughter is unnecessary because the skin can be sourced from cattle after its natural death 118 Gandhi said I worship it cow and I shall defend its worship against the whole world and that the cow is a poem of pity One reads pity in the gentle animal She is the mother to millions of Indian mankind Protection of the cow means protection of the whole dumb creation of God 118 Gandhi considered cow protection as integral to Hindu beliefs and called cow protection to me is one of the most wonderful phenomena in human evolution and cow protection is the gift of Hinduism to the world that it is not Tilak or mantra or caste rules that judge Hindus but their ability to protect the cow 118 According to Gandhi cow protection means protection of lives that are helpless and weak in the world I would not kill a human being for protection a cow added Gandhi and I will not kill a cow for saving a human life be it ever so precious 118 On 25 July 1947 in a prayer meeting Gandhi opposed laws that were derived from religion He said In India no law can be made to ban cow slaughter I do not doubt that Hindus are forbidden the slaughter of cows I have been long pledged to serve the cow but how can my religion also be the religion of the rest of the Indians It will mean coercion against those Indians who are not Hindus 121 122 According to Gandhi Hindus should not demand cow slaughter laws based on their religious texts or sentiments in the same way that Muslims should not demand laws based on Shariat Quran Hadith in India or Pakistan 122 In 1940 one of the Special Committees of the Indian National Congress stated that slaughter of cow and its progeny must be totally prohibited However another Committee of the Congress opposed cow slaughter prohibition stating that the skin and leather of cow and its progeny which is fresh by slaughter should be sold and exported to earn foreign exchange 117 In 1944 the British placed restrictions on cattle slaughter in India on the grounds that the shortage of cattle was causing anxiety to the Government The shortage itself was attributed to the increased demand for cattle for cultivation transport milk and other purposes It was decided that in respect of slaughter by the army authorities working cattle as well as cattle fit for bearing offspring should not be slaughtered Accordingly the slaughter of all cattle below 3 years of age male cattle between 3 and 10 years female cattle between 3 and 10 years of age which are capable of producing milk as well as all cows which are pregnant or in milk was prohibited 117 During the British Raj there were several cases of communal riots caused by the slaughter of cows A historical survey of some major communal riots between 1717 and 1977 revealed that out of 167 incidents of rioting between Hindus and Muslims that although in some cases the reasons for provocation of the riots was not given 22 cases were attributable directly to cow slaughter 123 124 Post Independence edit nbsp Stamp of India Woman Dairy Farmer Cows and Milk BottlesThe Central Government in a letter dated 20 December 1950 directed the State Governments not to introduce total prohibition on slaughter stating Hides from slaughtered cattle are much superior to hides from the fallen cattle and fetch a higher price In the absence of slaughter the best type of hide which fetches good price in the export market will no longer be available A total ban on slaughter is thus detrimental to the export trade and work against the interest of the Tanning industry in the country 125 In 1955 a senior Congress member of parliament Seth Govind Das drafted a bill for India s parliament for a nationwide ban on cow slaughter stating that a large majority of the party was in favour India s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru opposed this national ban on cow slaughter and threatened to resign if the elected representatives passed the bill in India s parliament The bill failed by a vote of 95 to 12 126 127 Nehru declared that it was individual states to decide their laws on cow slaughter states Donald Smith and criticized the ban on cow slaughter as a wrong step 128 However Nehru s opposition was largely irrelevant states Steven Wilkinson because under India s Constitution and federal structure laws such as those on cattle slaughter has been an exclusive State subject rather than being a Central subject State legislatures such as those of Uttar Pradesh Bihar Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh enacted their own laws in the 1950s 128 129 nbsp A gaushala in Guntur Andhra Pradesh In 1958 a lawsuit was instigated in the Supreme Court of India regarding the constitutionality of the slaughter ban laws in the state where Qureshi petitioned that the laws infringed on Muslim rights to freely practice their religion such as sacrificing cows on Bakr Id day 128 The Court determined that neither the Quran nor the Hidaya mandates cow slaughter and the Islamic texts allow a goat or camel be sacrificed instead Therefore according to the Court a total ban on cow slaughter did not infringe on the religious freedom of Muslims under Articles 25 or 48 of its Constitution 128 In 1966 Indian independence activist Jayaprakash Narayan wrote a letter to then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi calling for a ban on cow slaughter Narayan wrote For myself I cannot understand why in a Hindu majority country like India where rightly or wrongly there is such a strong feeling about cow slaughter there cannot be a legal ban 125 In the same year the Hindu organisations started an agitation demanding a ban on the slaughter of cows But Indira Gandhi did not accede to the demand In July 1995 the Government of India stated before the Supreme Court that It is obvious that the Central Government as a whole is encouraging scientific and sustainable development of livestock resources and their efficient utilization which inter alia includes production of quality meat for export as well as for domestic market This is being done with a view of increasing the national wealth as well as better returns to the farmer In recent decades the Government has started releasing grants and loans for setting up of modern slaughter houses 125 Contemporary issues editHygiene edit Poor hygiene and prevalence of meat borne disease has been reported in studies of Indian cattle slaughter houses For example in a 1976 1978 survey of 1 100 slaughtered cattle in Kerala slaughter houses Prabhakaran and other scholars reported 468 cases of echinococcosis and 19 cases of cysticercosis the former affecting 365 livers and 340 lungs The cattle liver was affected by disease in 79 of cattle and the lung in 73 130 A 2001 study by Sumanth and other scholars on cattle slaughtered in Karnataka reported more than 60 of the carcasses were infected with schistosoma eggs and worms 43 A 2007 report by Ravindran indicated over 50 of cattle slaughtered in Wayanad were infected 42 However the population size was very limited and usually restricted to a single slaughter house skewing the results Illegal slaughterhouses and cattle theft edit Main article Cattle theft in India According to media reports India has numerous illegal slaughterhouses For example in the state of Andhra Pradesh the officials in 2013 reported over 3 000 illegal slaughterhouses 131 Cattle are traditionally left to freely roam streets and graze in India These are easy prey to thieves state Rosanna Masiola and Renato Tomei 132 According to The New York Times the organized mafia gangs pick up the cattle they can find and sell them to these illegal slaughterhouses These crimes are locally called cattle rustling or cattle lifting 131 In many cases the cows belong to poor dairy farmers who lack the facility or infrastructure to feed and maintain the cows and they don t traditionally keep them penned According to Masiola and Tomei the increasing meat consumption has led to cows becoming a target for theft 133 The theft of cattle for slaughter and beef production is economically attractive to the mafias in India In 2013 states Gardiner Harris a truck can fit 10 cows each fetching about 5 000 rupees about US 94 in 2013 or over US 900 per cattle stealing night operation In a country where some 800 million people live on less than US 2 per day such theft based mafia operations are financially attractive 131 According to Andrew Buncombe when smuggled across its border the price per cattle is nearly threefold higher and the crime is financially more attractive 134 Many states have reported rising thefts of cattle and associated violence according to The Indian Express 135 According to T N Madan Muslim groups have been accused of stealing cattle as a part of their larger violence against non Muslims 136 Cattle theft states David Gilmartin and other scholars was a common crime in British India and has been a trigger for riots 137 138 According to the Bangladeshi newspaper The Daily Star some of cattle theft operations move the cattle stolen in India across the border into Bangladesh ahead of festivals such as Eid ul Azha when the demand for meat increases The criminals dye the white or red cows into black to make identifying the stolen cow difficult The Border Guard Bangladesh in 2016 reported of confiscating stolen cattle where some of cattle s original skin color had been tampered with 139 Hundreds of thousands of cows states the British newspaper The Independent are illegally smuggled from India into Bangladesh every year to be slaughtered 134 Gangs from both sides of the border are involved in this illegal smuggling involving an estimated 1 5 million 15 lakhs cattle a year and cattle theft is a source of the supply states Andrew Buncombe 134 According to Zahoor Rather trade in stolen cattle is one of the important crime related border issues between India and Bangladesh 140 Castes and religions edit See also Diet in Hinduism Hindu views on cattle slaughter and beef eating is caste based while other scholars disagree Dalit Hindus who eat beef state the former while those who don t state that the position of Dalit Hindus on cattle slaughter is ambiguous 141 142 Deryck Lodrick states for example beef eating is common among low caste Hindus and vegetarianism is an upper caste phenomenon 141 In contrast cow cherishing Krishna worshipping rustic piety state Susan Bayly and others has been popular among agriculture driven cattle husbandry farm laboring and merchant castes These have typically been considered the low castes in Hinduism 143 According to Bayly reverence for the cow is widely shared in India across castes The traditional belief has also associated death or the dead with being unclean polluting or defiling such as those who handle corpse carrion and animal remains 143 However the tradition differentiates between natural or accidental death and intentional slaughter According to Frederick J Simoons many members of low castes and tribal groups in India reject cow slaughter and beef eating some of them quite strongly while others support beef eating and cattle slaughter 11 According to Simoons and Lodrick the reverence for cattle among Hindus and Indians in general is more comprehensively understood by considering both the religious dimensions and the daily lives in rural India 144 The veneration of cow across various Hindu castes states Lodrick emerged with the fifteenth century revival of Vaishnavism when god Krishna along with his cows became a popular object of bhakti devotional worship 145 In contrast other scholars such as J A B van Buitenen and Daniel Sheridan state that the theology and the most popular texts related to Krishna such as the Bhagavad Gita was composed by about 2nd century BCE 146 and the Bhagavata Purana was composed between 500 and 1000 CE 147 148 According to People s Union for Democratic Rights PUDR some Dalits work in leather which includes cow skin and they rely on it for their livelihood The position of Dalits to cow protection is highly ambivalent states PUDR given their Hindu identity and the endemic contradiction between the Hindu ethos of protecting the cow and a trade dependent fundamentally on the skin of cows 149 The selling of old cattle for skin according to them is supported by members of both dominant and subordinate castes for the leather related economy 150 Dominant groups officials and even some Dalits state that Dalits are cow protectors The inclusion of Dalits in cow protection ideology according to PUDR is accompanied by avowal of loyalty to cow protection exposing the fragility of the cow protection ideology across castes 151 Some Dalit student associations in the Hyderabad region state that beef preparations such as beef biryani is the traditional food of low castes Historical evidence does not support this claim state Claude Levy Straus and Brigitte Sebastia Beef as the traditional food of impoverished Dalits is a reconstruction of history and Indian beef dishes are a Mughal era innovation and more recently invented tradition It is the nineteenth century politics that has associated beef and cattle slaughter with Muslim and Dalit identity states Sebastia 152 Economic imperative edit According to anthropologist Marvin Harris the importance of cattle to Hindus and other religious groups is beyond religion because the cattle has been and remains an important pillar of rural economy 153 In the traditional economy states Harris a team of oxen is Indian peasant s tractor thresher and family car combined and the cow is the factory that produces those oxen 153 note 3 The cattle produce nutritious milk their dung when dried serves as a major cooking fuel and for the poor the cattle is an essential partner in many stages of agriculture When cattle fall sick the family worries over them like Westerners do over their pets or family members A natural loss of a cattle from untimely death can cripple a poor family and thus slaughtering a creature so useful and essential is unthinkable According to Harris India s unpredictable monsoons and famines over its history meant even greater importance of cattle because Indian breeds of cattle can survive with little food and water for extended periods of time 153 According to Britha Mikkelsen and other scholars cow dung produced by young and old cattle is the traditional cooking fuel as dung cakes and fertilizer in India The recycling substitutes over 25 million tons of fossil fuels or 60 million tons of wood every year providing the majority of cooking fuel needs in rural India 154 155 In addition to being essential fuel for rural family cattle manure is a significant source of fertilizer in Indian agriculture 156 The Indian religions adapted to the rural economic constraints states Harris Preserving cattle by opposing slaughter has been and remains an economic necessity and an insurance for the impoverished 153 The cow is sacred in India states Harris not because of superstitious capricious and ignorant beliefs but because of real economic imperatives and cattle s role in the Indian tradition of integrated living Cattle became essential in India just like dogs or cars became essential in other human cultures states Harris 153 Animal cruelty edit The slaughterhouses in India have been accused of cruelty against animals by PETA and other humane treatment of animals groups 157 According to PETA and these groups the slaughterhouse workers slit animals throats with dull blades and let them bleed to death Cattle are skinned and dismembered while they are still alive and in full view of other animals 157 The Supreme Court of India in February 2017 ordered a state governments to stop the illegal slaughterhouses and set up enforcement committees to monitor the treatment of animals used for meat and leather 157 The Court has also ruled that the Indian Constitution requires Indian citizens to show compassion to the animal kingdom respect the fundamental rights of animals and asked the states to prevent cruelty to animals 158 Vigilantism edit This section may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help to create a more balanced presentation Discuss and resolve this issue before removing this message October 2020 Further information Cow vigilante violence in India According to Judith Walsh widespread cow protection riots occurred repeatedly in British India in the 1880s and 1890s These were observed in regions of Punjab United Provinces Bihar Bengal Bombay Presidency and in parts of South Burma Rangoon The anti Cow Killing riots of 1893 in Punjab caused the death of at least 100 people 159 160 The 1893 cow killing riots started during the Muslim festival of Bakr Id the riot repeated in 1894 and they were the largest riots in British India after the 1857 revolt 161 One of the issues states Walsh in these riots was the Muslim slaughter of cows for meat particularly as part of religious festivals such as Bakr Id 160 According to Mark Doyle the first cow protection societies on the Indian subcontinent were started by Kukas of Sikhism also called Namdharis 162 The Sikh Kukas or Namdharis were agitating for cow protection after the British annexed Punjab In 1871 states Peter van der Veer Sikhs killed Muslim butchers of cows in Amritsar and Ludhiana and viewed cow protection as a sign of the moral quality of the state 163 According to Barbara Metcalf and Thomas Metcalf Sikhs were agitating for the well being of cows in the 1860s and their ideas spread to Hindu reform movements 164 Cattle protection related violence continued at numerous occasions often over the Muslim festival of Bakri Id in the first half of the 20th century 165 166 Cow slaughter in contemporary India has triggered riots and violent vigilante groups 159 167 168 According to PUDR the Vishwa Hindu Parishad a Hindu group and the Gauraksha Samiti have defended violent vigilantism around cow protection as sentiments against the sin of cow slaughter and not related to the social identity of the victims 169 Various groups such as the families of Dalits who were victims of a mob violence linked to cow slaughter in 2002 did not question the legitimacy of cow protection 170 According to a Reuters report citing IndiaSpend analysis a total of 44 Indians 39 of them Muslims have been killed and 124 injured between 2010 and June 2018 in cow related violence 171 Stray cattle edit Further information Stray cattle Fear of arrest persecution and of lynching by cow vigilantes has reduced the trading of cattle Once a cow stops giving milk feeding and maintenance of the cow becomes a financial burden on the farmer who cannot afford their upkeep Cattle that farmers are unable to sell are eventually abandoned India has over 5 million stray cattle according to the livestock census data released in January 2020 172 The stray cow attacks on humans and crops in both urban and rural areas is an issue for the residents 173 174 Stray cattle are a nuisance to traffic in urban areas and frequently cause road accidents 172 175 The problem of solid waste pollution especially plastic pollution and garbage dumped at public places poses a risk to stray cattle which feed on garbage 176 Legislation edit nbsp Cow slaughter laws in various states in IndiaThe Preservation protection and improvement of stock and prevention of animal diseases veterinary training and practice is Entry 15 of the State List of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution meaning that State Legislatures have exclusive powers to legislate the prevention of slaughter and preservation of cattle 177 178 The prohibition of cow slaughter is also one of the Directive Principles of State Policy contained in Article 48 of the Constitution It reads The State shall endeavour to organise agriculture and animal husbandry on modern and scientific lines and shall in particular take steps for preserving and improving the breeds and prohibiting the slaughter of cows and calves and other milch and draught cattle 179 Several State Governments and Union Territories UTs have enacted cattle preservation laws in one form or the other Arunachal Pradesh Kerala Meghalaya Mizoram Nagaland Tripura Lakshadweep and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands have no legislation All other states UTs have enacted legislation to prevent the slaughter of cow and its progeny 180 Kerala is a major consumer of beef and has no regulation on the slaughter of cow and its progeny As a result cattle is regularly smuggled into Kerala from the neighbouring States of Tamil Nadu Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh for the purpose of slaughter 180 There have been several attacks on cow transporters on the suspicion of carrying cows for slaughter 181 182 183 184 Between May 2015 and May 2017 at least ten Muslims were killed in these attacks 182 In 1958 Muslims of Bihar petitioned the Supreme Court of India that the ban on cow slaughter violated their religious right The Court unanimously rejected their claim 185 In several cases such as Mohd Hanif Qureshi v State of Bihar AIR 1959 SCR 629 Hashumatullah v State of Madhya Pradesh Abdul Hakim and others v State of Bihar AIR 1961 SC 448 and Mohd Faruk v State of Madhya Pradesh the Supreme Court has held that A total ban on cattle slaughter was not permissible if under economic conditions keeping useless bull or bullock be a burden on the society and therefore not in the public interest 85 The clause under economic conditions keeping useless has been studied by the Animal Welfare Board of India which determined that the fuel made from cow dung for household cooking purposes in the Indian society suggests that the cattle is never useless while it produces dung 85 In May 2016 Bombay High Court gave the judgement that consumption or possession of beef is legal under Article 21 of Constitution of India but upheld the ban on cow slaughter in the state of Maharashtra 186 187 The Supreme Court of India heard a case between 2004 and 2017 The case petitioned the Court to order a ban on the common illegal treatment of animals during transport and slaughter In February 2017 the Court ordered a state governments to stop the illegal slaughterhouses and set up enforcement committees to monitor the treatment of animals used for meat and leather 157 The Court has also ruled according to a Times of India report that it was evident from the combined reading of Articles 48 and 51 A g of the Indian Constitution that citizens must show compassion to the animal kingdom The animals have their own fundamental rights Article 48 specifically lays down that the state shall endeavour to prohibit the slaughter of cows and calves other milch and draught cattle 158 Non uniformity edit No state law explicitly bans the consumption of beef There is a lack of uniformity among State laws governing cattle slaughter The strictest laws are in Delhi Gujarat Haryana Himachal Pradesh Jammu and Kashmir Ladakh Punjab Rajasthan and Uttarakhand where the slaughter of cow and its progeny including bulls and bullocks of all ages is completely banned However in Uttarakhand slaughter of cows and bulls which are deemed to be injured or otherwise useless is permitted with necessary permission Most States prohibit the slaughter of cows of all ages However Assam and West Bengal permit the slaughter of cows of over the ages of 10 and 14 years respectively Most States prohibit the slaughter of calves whether male or female With the exception of Bihar and Rajasthan where age of a calf is given as below 3 years the other States have not defined the age of a calf According to the National Commission on Cattle the definition of a calf being followed in Maharashtra by some executive instructions was below the age of 1 year 188 189 In Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu Delhi Goa Gujarat Haryana Himachal Pradesh Puducherry Punjab Rajasthan Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand violation of State laws on cattle slaughter are both cognizable and non bailable offences Most of other states specify that offences would be cognizable only The maximum term of imprisonment varies from 6 months to 14 years life term and the fine from 1 000 to 5 00 000 Delhi and Madhya Pradesh have fixed a mandatory minimum term of imprisonment at 6 months Cows are routinely shipped to states with lower or no requirement for slaughter even though it is illegal in most states to ship animals across state borders to be slaughtered 190 191 Many illegal slaughterhouses operate in large cities such as Chennai and Mumbai As of 2004 there were 3 600 legal and 30 000 illegal slaughterhouses in India 192 Efforts to close them down have so far been largely unsuccessful In 2013 Andhra Pradesh estimated that there were 3 100 illegal and 6 licensed slaughterhouses in the State 193 Legislative history edit Constituent Assembly edit After India attained Independence the members of the Constituent Assembly a body consisting of indirectly elected representatives set up for the purpose of drafting a constitution for India debated the question of making a provision for the protection and preservation of the cow in the Constitution of India An amendment for including a provision in the Directive Principles of State Policy as Article 38A was introduced by Pandit Thakur Dass Bhargava The amendment read The State shall endeavour to organise agriculture and animal husbandry on modern and scientific lines and shall in particular take steps for preserving and improving the breeds of cattle and prohibit the slaughter of cow and other useful cattle specially milch and draught cattle and their young stock 194 Another amendment motion was moved by Seth Govind Das who sought to extend the scope of the provisions for prohibiting slaughter to cover cow and its progeny by adding the following words at the end of Bhargava s amendment The word cow includes bulls bullocks young stock of genus cow Bhargava s amendment was passed by the Constituent Assembly but Das was rejected 194 Pandit Thakur Dass Bhargava East Punjab Seth Govind Das Central Provinces and Berar Shibban Lal Saksena United Provinces Ram Sahai United State of Gwalior Indore Malwa Madhya Bharat Raghu Vira Central Provinces and Berar and Raghunath Vinayak Dhulekar United Provinces strongly pleaded for the inclusion of a provision in the Constitution for prohibiting the slaughter of cows Although some members were keen on including the provision in the chapter on Fundamental Rights but later as a compromise and on the basis of an assurance given by B R Ambedkar the amendment was moved for inclusion as a Directive Principle of State Policy 194 Bhargava stated that While moving this amendment I have hesitation in stating that for people like me and those that do not agree with the point of view of Ambedkar and others this entails in a way a sort of sacrifice Seth Govind Das had sent one such amendment to be included in the Fundamental Rights and other members also had sent similar amendments To my mind it would have been much better if this could have been incorporated in the Fundamental Rights but some of my Assembly friends differed and it is the desire of Ambedkar that this matter instead of being included in Fundamental Rights should be incorporated in the Directive Principles As a matter of fact it is the agreed opinion of the Assembly that this problem should be solved in such a manner that the objective is gained without using any sort of coercion I have purposely adopted this course as to my mind the amendment fulfills our object and is midway between the Directive Principles and the Fundamental Rights Bhargava also observed that I do not want that due to its inclusion in the Fundamental Rights non Hindus should complain that they have been forced to accept a certain thing against their will The result of the debate in the Constituent Assembly was that the Bhargava s amendment was carried and the Article in its present form exists as Article 48 of the Constitution as one of the Directive Principles of State Policy 194 Parliament edit A number of Private Member s Bills and Resolutions regarding the prevention of cow slaughter have been introduced in both Houses of Parliament from time to time However none have been successful in obtaining a complete nationwide ban on cow slaughter Attempts to address the issue through a central legislation or otherwise are described below 195 Vinoba Bhave went on an indefinite fast from 22 April 1979 demanding that the Governments of West Bengal and Kerala agree to enact legislation banning cow slaughter On 12 April 1979 a Private Members Resolution was passed in the Lok Sabha by 42 votes to 8 with 12 absentees It read This House directs the Government to ensure total ban on the slaughter of cows of all ages and calves in consonance with the Directive Principles laid down in Article 48 of the Constitution as interpreted by the Supreme Court as well as necessitated by strong economic considerations based on the recommendations of the Cattle Preservation and Development Committee and the reported fast by Acharya Vinoba Bhave from 21st April 1979 196 Then Prime Minister Morarji Desai later announced in Parliament that the government would initiate action for amending the Constitution with a view to conferring legislative competence on the Union Parliament for legislating on the subject of cow protection Accordingly a Constitution Amendment Bill seeking to bring the subject of prevention of cow slaughter on to the Concurrent List was introduced in the Lok Sabha on 18 May 1979 The Bill however lapsed on account of dissolution of the Sixth Lok Sabha Bhave reiterated his demand for a total ban on cow slaughter in July 1980 while addressing the All India Goseva Sammelan He also requested that cows should not be taken from one State to another 196 In 1981 the question of amending the Constitution by introducing a Bill was again examined by the Government but in view of the sensitive nature of the issue and owing to political compulsions a wait and watch policy was adopted A number of complaints were received from time to time that despite the ban on the slaughter of cow and its progeny healthy bullocks were being slaughtered under one pretext or the other and calves were being maimed so that they could be declared useless and ultimately slaughtered 196 Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in her letter dated 24 February 1982 wrote to the Chief Ministers of 14 States viz Andhra Pradesh Assam Bihar Gujarat Haryana Himachal Pradesh Karnataka Madhya Pradesh Maharashtra Orissa Punjab Rajasthan Uttar Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir in which she desired that the ban be enforced in letter and spirit that the ban on cow slaughter is not allowed to be circumvented by devious methods and that Committees to inspect cattle before they are admitted to slaughter houses be adopted 196 Recognizing that the problem basically arose on account of inaction or obstruction on the part of a few States and large scale smuggling of cows and calves from a prohibition State to a non prohibition State like Kerala was taking place a suggestion was made that this problem be brought to the notice of the Sarkaria Commission which was making recommendations regarding Centre State relations but this idea was dropped as the commission was then in the final stages of report writing 196 Legislation by State or Union Territory editThe legal status of cattle slaughter in Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Lakshadweep is unknown Andhra Pradesh edit The Andhra Pradesh Prohibition of Cow Slaughter and Animal Preservation Act 1977 governs the slaughter of cattle cows and buffaloes in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana Therefore the law governing the slaughter of cattle in Andhra Pradesh is the same as that in Telangana In the case of cows the law makes a distinction between males and females The slaughter of female cows and of heifers is totally forbidden The slaughter of bulls and bullocks is permitted upon obtaining a fit for slaughter certificate to be issued only if the animal is not economical or is not likely to become economical for the purpose of breeding or draught agricultural operations The certificate can be issued by any veterinary doctor and is a source of much corruption and misuse The law also prohibits the slaughter of calves whether male or female The age limit of calf is not defined In the case of buffaloes the law firstly forbids in absolute terms the slaughter of calves whether male or female Again the age limit of calf is not defined and therefore there is much misuse resulting in the slaughter of many young male animals who are only a few months old Secondly the law forbids the slaughter of adult buffaloes unless a fit for slaughter certificate is issued by a veterinarian The certificate can be issued if the animal is deemed uneconomical for purposes of milking breeding or draught agricultural operations Thus the law permits the slaughter of all adult male buffaloes and of all old and spent female buffaloes whose milk yield is not economical For this reason the slaughter of buffaloes both male and female is rampant in Andhra Pradesh Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable offence 197 Arunachal Pradesh edit No ban on cattle slaughter 198 Assam edit The Assam Cattle Preservation Act 1950 governs the slaughter of cattle in Assam Slaughter of all cattle including bulls bullocks cows calves male and female buffaloes and buffalo calves is prohibited Slaughter of cattle is permitted on obtaining a fit for slaughter certificate to be given if cattle is over 15 years of age or has become permanently incapacitated for work or breeding due to injury deformity or any incurable disease Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable offence 197 In 2021 Assam Assembly passed a bill that prohibits the slaughter or sale of beef within a 5 km radius of any temple The legislation seeks to ensure that permission for slaughter is not granted to areas that are predominantly inhabited by Hindu Jain Sikh and other non beef eating communities or places that fall within a 5 km radius of a temple satra and any other institution as may be prescribed by the authorities Exemptions however might be granted for certain religious occasions 199 200 Bihar edit The Bihar Preservation and Improvement of Animals Act 1955 governs the slaughter of cattle in Bihar Slaughter of cow and calf is totally prohibited Slaughter of bulls or bullocks of over 25 years of age or permanently incapacitated for work or breeding due to injury deformity or any incurable disease is permitted The law also bans the export of cows calves bulls and bullocks from Bihar for any purpose The law defines a bull as an uncastrated male of above 3 years a bullock as castrated male of above 3 years a calf as male or female below 3 years and a cow as female above 3 years Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable offence 197 Chandigarh edit The Punjab Prohibition of Cow Slaughter Act 1955 applies to Chandigarh Himachal Pradesh and Punjab Therefore the law governing the slaughter of cattle in Chandigarh has the same provisions as that in Himachal Pradesh and Punjab Slaughter of cow includes bull bullock ox heifer or calf and its progeny is totally illegal The export of cattle for slaughter and the sale of beef are both illegal 197 This does not include flesh of cow contained in sealed containers and imported meaning that restaurants in the states can serve beef if they can prove its meat has been imported into the state The law also excuses the killing of cows by accident or in self defence 201 Consumption is not penalized 198 Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 2 years or fine up to 1 000 or both The law places the burden of proof on the accused The crime is treated as a cognizable and non bailable offence 197 Chhattisgarh edit Chhattisgarh Agricultural Cattle Preservation Act 2004 applies to the state The operative sections of the Act prohibit slaughter of all agricultural cattle possession of the beef of any agricultural cattle and transport of agricultural cattle for the purpose of its slaughter or with the knowledge that it will be or is likely to be so slaughtered The Schedule lists Agricultural Cattle as 1 Cows of all ages 2 Calves of cows and of she buffaloes 3 Bulls 4 Bullocks 5 Male and Female buffaloes 202 Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu edit The Goa Daman amp Diu Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act 1978 governs the slaughter of cattle in Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu Under the 1978 Act which also applies to Goa there is a total ban on slaughter of cow includes cow heifer or calf except when the cow is suffering pain or contagious disease or for medical research The law does not define the age of a calf There is also a total prohibition on the sale of beef or beef products in any form in the union territory Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to 2 years or fine up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable and non bailable offence 197 Delhi edit The Delhi Agricultural Cattle Preservation Act 1994 governs the slaughter of cattle in Delhi Slaughter of all agricultural cattle is totally prohibited The law defines agricultural cattle as cows of all ages calves of cows of all ages and bulls and bullocks 197 The slaughter of buffaloes is legal The possession of the flesh of agricultural cattle slaughtered outside Delhi is also prohibited 201 The transport or export of cattle for slaughter is also prohibited Export for other purposes is permitted on declaration that cattle will not be slaughtered However export to a state where slaughter is not banned by law is not permitted 197 Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to 5 years and fine up to 10 000 provided that minimum imprisonment should not be for less than 6 months and fine not less than 1 000 The law places the burden of proof on the accused The crime is treated as a cognizable and non bailable offence 197 Goa edit The Goa Daman amp Diu Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act 1978 and The Goa Animal Preservation Act 1995 govern the slaughter of cattle in Goa Under the 1978 Act which also applies to Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu there is a total ban on slaughter of cow includes cow heifer or calf except when the cow is suffering pain or contagious disease or for medical research The law does not define the age of a calf Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to 2 years or fine up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable and non bailable offence This act though has not been necessarily implemented 203 The Goa Animal Preservation Act 1995 applies to bulls bullocks male calves and buffaloes of all ages All the animals can be slaughtered on obtaining a fit for slaughter certificate which is not given if the animal is likely to become economical for draught breeding or milk in the case of she buffaloes purposes The sale of beef obtained in contravention of the above provisions is prohibited However sale of beef imported from other states is legal Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable offence 197 Gujarat edit The Bombay Animal Preservation Act 1954 governs the slaughter of cattle in Gujarat Slaughter of cows calves of cows bulls and bullocks is totally prohibited Slaughter of buffaloes is permitted on certain conditions Anyone violating the law could be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable offence 197 The Gujarat Animal Preservation Amendment Act 2011 was passed unopposed in the Gujarat Legislative Assembly with support from the main opposition party on 27 September 2011 The amendment which came into effect in October 2011 criminalized transporting the animal for the purpose of slaughter and included a provision to confiscate the vehicle used for carrying cow meat It also increased the maximum jail term for slaughtering cattle to 7 years and maximum fine to 50 000 204 205 206 In 2017 the Gujarat Assembly amended the bill further extending the punishment and fine The punishment was increased to a minimum of 10 years and a maximum of life term of a 14 years and the fine was enhanced to the range of 1 lakh 5 lakh The new law also made offences under the amended Act non bailable 207 208 209 210 Haryana edit Haryana Gauvansh Sanrakshan and Gausamvardhan Act 2015 applies to Haryana 211 Earlier The Punjab Prohibition of Cow Slaughter Act 1955 was the law governing the slaughter of cattle in Haryana has the same provisions as that in Chandigarh Himachal Pradesh and Punjab However Haryana has stricter penalties for violating the law than the other two states and Chandigarh even prior to 2015 Act Slaughter of cow includes bull bullock ox heifer or calf and its progeny is totally prohibited The export of cattle for slaughter and the sale of beef are both prohibited 197 This does not include flesh of cow contained in sealed containers and imported meaning that restaurants in the states can serve beef if they can prove its meat has been imported into the state The law also excuses the killing of cows by accident or in self defence 201 Consumption of beef is not penalized 198 Anyone violating the law can be punished with rigorous imprisonment up to 10 years or fine up to 1 lakh or both The law places the burden of proof on the accused The crime is treated as a cognizable and non bailable offence 197 211 Himachal Pradesh edit The Punjab Prohibition of Cow Slaughter Act 1955 applies to Chandigarh Himachal Pradesh and Punjab Therefore the law governing the slaughter of cattle in Himachal Pradesh is the same as that in Chandigarh and Punjab Slaughter of cow includes bull bullock ox heifer or calf and its progeny is totally prohibited The export of cattle for slaughter and the sale of beef are both prohibited Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 2 years or fine up to 1 000 or both The law places the burden of proof on the accused The crime is treated as a cognizable and non bailable offence 197 Jammu and Kashmir edit The Ranbir Penal Code 1932 governed the slaughter of cattle in Jammu and Kashmir which is now repealed Voluntary slaughter of any bovine animal such as ox bull cow or calf shall be punished with imprisonment of either description which may extend to 10 years and shall also be liable to fine The fine may extend to 5 times the price of the animals slaughtered as determined by the court Possession of the flesh of slaughtered animals is also an offence punishable with imprisonment up to 1 year and fine up to 500 197 In 2019 the 150 year old ban on cow slaughter was lifted an unexpected result of the end of the special status of Kashmir and Ladakh The move to re criminalise beef consumption and sale on the grounds of environmental activism in India was overturned by the High Court of Kashmir 212 32 213 214 Jharkhand edit The Bihar Preservation and Improvement of Animals Act 1955 governs the slaughter of cattle in Jharkhand Slaughter of cow and calf is totally prohibited Slaughter of bulls or bullocks of over 15 years of age or permanently incapacitated for work or breeding due to injury deformity or any incurable disease is permitted The law also bans the export of cows calves bulls and bullocks from Jharkhand for any purpose The law defines a bull as an uncastrated male of above 3 years a bullock as castrated male of above 3 years a calf as male or female below 3 years and a cow as female above 3 years Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable offence 197 Karnataka edit The Karnataka Prevention of Cow Slaughter and Cattle Preservation Act 1964 governed the slaughter of cattle in Karnataka until 2020 and was replaced by The Karnataka Prevention of Slaughter and Preservation of Cattle Act 2020 215 In 2010 the Karnataka Prevention of Slaughter and Preservation of Cattle Act 2010 and in 2014 the Karnataka Prevention of Slaughter and Preservation of Cattle Act Amendment 2014 were introduced by subsequently withdrawn 215 Up to 2020 the slaughter of cow calf of a cow male or female or calf of a she buffalo totally prohibited Slaughter of bulls bullocks and adult buffaloes was permitted on obtaining a fit for slaughter certificate provided cattle is over 12 years of age or is permanently incapacitated for breeding draught or milk due to injury deformity or any other cause Transport for slaughter to a place outside the state not permitted Sale purchase or disposal of a cow or a calf for slaughter is not permitted Up to 2020 anyone violating the law could be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of six months or fine of up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable offence 197 In January 2021 the Karnataka Prevention of Slaughter and Preservation of Cattle Act 2020 became official This act applied to any breed of cattle up to twelve years of age 216 With the act people found guilty of breaking the law would receive a prison sentence of 3 to 7 years People found guilty would also receive a monetary fine between 50 000 rupees to 10 lakh depending on the number of times of breaking this law 217 Only Buffaloes thirteen years and older are exempted from this law Buffaloes that can not produce milk or reproduce are also exempted 218 Kerala edit Kerala permits the slaughter of every type of cattle Slaughtering of animals is formally regulated by the government in order to maintain public health and sanitation Panchayat laws permit slaughter only in approved slaughter houses 219 Beef accounts for 25 of all meat consumed in Kerala 220 Beef is sold at meat shops while cattle is traded at weekly markets across the state 221 Further it has been ruled an obligation of panchayat to provide for meat stalls including those that may sell beef 222 Ladakh edit The Ranbir Penal Code 1932 governed the slaughter of cattle in Ladakh which is now repealed and has not been replaced by any new law Voluntary slaughter of any bovine animal such as ox bull cow or calf shall be punished with imprisonment of either description which may extend to 10 years and shall also be liable to fine The fine may extend to 5 times the price of the animals slaughtered as determined by the court Possession of the flesh of slaughtered animals is also an offence punishable with imprisonment up to 1 year and fine up to 500 197 Madhya Pradesh edit The Madhya Pradesh Agricultural Cattle Preservation Act 1959 governs the slaughter of cattle in Madhya Pradesh Slaughter of cows calves of cows bulls bullocks and buffalo calves is prohibited However bulls and bullocks are being slaughtered in the light of a Supreme Court judgement provided the cattle is over 20 223 years or has become unfit for work or breeding Transport or export of cattle for slaughter not permitted Export for any purpose to another State where cow slaughter is not banned by law is not permitted The sale purchase and or disposal of cow and its progeny and possession of flesh of cattle is prohibited Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 3 years and fine of 5 000 or both Normally imprisonment shall not be less than 6 months and fine not less than 1 000 The law places the burden of proof on the accused The crime is treated as a cognizable offence 197 Maharashtra edit The Maharashtra Animal Preservation Act 1976 governs the slaughter of cattle in Maharashtra Slaughter of cows includes a heifer or male or female calf of a cow is totally prohibited 224 Slaughter of bulls bullocks and buffaloes is allowed on obtaining a fit for slaughter certificate if it is not likely to become economical for draught breeding or milk in the case of she buffaloes purposes Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 6 months and a fine of up to 1 000 The law places the burden of proof on the accused The crime is treated as a cognizable offence 197 Maharashtra cow slaughter ban was later extended to ban the sale and export of beef with a punishment of 5 years jail and or a 10 000 fine for possession or sale 225 226 This law came into effect from 2 March 2015 227 Manipur edit In Manipur cattle slaughter is restricted under a proclamation by the Maharaja in the Durbar Resolution of 1939 The proclamation states According to Hindu religion the killing of cow is a sinful act It is also against Manipuri Custom 197 However beef is largely consumed in the hill districts with large Christian populations and sold openly in cities like Churachandpur 221 Meghalaya edit No ban on cattle slaughter beef consumed widely 197 Mizoram edit No ban on cattle slaughter beef consumed widely 198 Nagaland edit No ban on cattle slaughter beef consumed widely 197 Odisha edit The Orissa Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act 1960 governs the slaughter of cattle in Odisha Slaughter of cows includes heifer or calf is totally prohibited Slaughter of bulls and bullocks is permitted on obtaining a fit for slaughter certificate provided that the cattle is over 14 years of age or has become permanently unfit for breeding or draught Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 2 years or fine up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable offence 197 Puducherry edit The Pondicherry Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act 1968 governs the slaughter of cattle in Puducherry Slaughter of cows includes heifer or calf is totally prohibited Slaughter of bulls and bullocks is permitted on obtaining a fit for slaughter certificate provided that the cattle is over age of 15 years or has become permanently unfit for breeding or draught The sale and or transport of beef is prohibited Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 2 years or fine up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable and non bailable offence 197 Punjab edit The Punjab Prohibition of Cow Slaughter Act 1955 applies to Chandigarh Himachal Pradesh and Punjab Therefore the law governing the slaughter of cattle in Punjab has the same provisions as that in Chandigarh and Himachal Pradesh Slaughter of cow includes bull bullock ox heifer or calf and its progeny is totally illegal The export of cattle for slaughter and the sale of beef are both illegal 197 This does not include flesh of cow contained in sealed containers and imported meaning that restaurants in the states can serve beef if they can prove its meat has been imported into the state The law also excuses the killing of cows by accident or in self defense 201 Consumption is not penalized 198 Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to a maximum of 2 years or fine up to 1 000 or both The law places the burden of proof on the accused The crime is treated as a cognizable and non bailable offence 197 Rajasthan edit The Rajasthan Bovine Animal Prohibition of Slaughter and Regulation of Temporary Migration or Export Act 1995 governs the slaughter of cattle in Rajasthan Slaughter of all bovine animals includes cow calf heifer bull or bullocks is prohibited Possession sale and or transport of beef and beef products is prohibited The export of bovine animals for slaughter is prohibited The law requires custody of seized animals to be given to any recognized voluntary animal welfare agency failing which to any Goshala Gosadan or a suitable person who volunteers to maintain the animal Government of Rajasthan has also introduced a Bill Bill No 16 2015 to ban migration out of State and slaughter of Camels in the State 228 Anyone violating the law can be punished with rigorous imprisonment of not less than 1 year and up to a maximum of 2 years and fine up to 10 000 The law places the burden of proof on the accused 197 Sikkim edit Under The Sikkim Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act 2017 cow slaughter is a non bailable offence in Sikkim 198 Tamil Nadu edit The Tamil Nadu Animal Preservation Act 1958 governs the slaughter of cattle in Tamil Nadu All animals may be slaughtered upon obtaining a fit for slaughter certificate The law defines animals as bulls bullocks cows calves and buffaloes of all ages The certificate is issued when an animal is over 10 years of age unfit for labor breeding or had become permanently incapacitated for work and breeding due to injury deformity or any incurable disease Anyone violating the Act can be punished with imprisonment of up to 3 years or fine up to 1 000 or both 197 Telangana edit The Andhra Pradesh Prohibition of Cow Slaughter and Animal Preservation Act 1977 governs the slaughter of cattle in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana Therefore the law governing the slaughter of cattle in Telangana is the same as that in Andhra Pradesh Slaughter of cows includes heifer or a calf whether male or female of a cow is prohibited The law does not define the age of a calf Slaughter of bulls and bullocks is allowed on obtaining a fit for slaughter certificate to be given only if the animal is not economical or is not likely to become economical for the purpose of breeding or draught agricultural operations Anyone violating the law can be punished with imprisonment up to maximum of 6 months or fine of up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable offence 197 Tripura edit There exists as of 2018 no ban on cattle slaughter in Tripura 229 The consumption of beef however has been historically rather limited due to religious and cultural reasons given that the erstwhile Princely State of Tripura used to be under the rule of the Hindu Manikya Kings during the British Raj and emerged as an overwhelmingly Hindu majority state after the partition of Bengal into East Bengal now Bangladesh and West Bengal India Tripura is now a Bengali Hindu majority state Uttar Pradesh edit The Uttar Pradesh Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act 1955 governs the slaughter of cattle in Uttar Pradesh Slaughter of cow includes a heifer and calf is totally prohibited Transport of cow outside the State for slaughter is not permitted The sale of beef is prohibited The law defines beef as the flesh of cow and of such bull or bullock whose slaughter is prohibited under the Act but does not include such flesh contained in sealed containers and imported into Uttar Pradesh Anyone violating the Act can be punished with rigorous imprisonment of up to 2 years or fine up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable and non bailable offence 197 The Act permitted the slaughter of bull or bullock on obtaining a fit for slaughter certificate provided it was over the age of 15 years or had become permanently unfit for breeding draught and any agricultural operations 197 However the Government of Uttar Pradesh issued an ordinance in 2001 prohibiting the slaughter of cow and its progeny 180 On 6 June 2017 Uttar Pradesh s Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath directed the state police to take action against cow slaughter and cattle smuggling under the National Security Act and the Gangster Act 230 Uttarakhand edit The Uttar Pradesh Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act 1955 governs the slaughter of cattle in Uttarakhand Slaughter of cow includes a heifer and calf is totally prohibited Transport of cow outside the State for slaughter is not permitted The sale of beef is prohibited The law defines beef as the flesh of cow and of such bull or bullock whose slaughter is prohibited under the Act but does not include such flesh contained in sealed containers and imported into Uttarakhand Anyone violating the Act can be punished with rigorous imprisonment of up to 2 years or fine up to 1 000 or both The crime is treated as a cognizable and non bailable offence 197 West Bengal edit In West Bengal there is no ban on the consumption of beef or slaughter if carried out in government or municipal slaughterhouses after a certificate from a veterinarian The Animal Slaughter Control Act 2009 exempts slaughter for religious purposes however the Supreme Court has stated that such exemptions are illegal in India 198 See also editRelated Indian topics 1966 anti cow slaughter agitation Aani Maani an Indian film depicting consequences of cow slaughter ban for a Muslim family Animal sacrifice in Hinduism Meat consumption among Sikhs Cattle theft in India Cow protection movement Cow vigilante violence in India Cow belt Diet in Hinduism Diet in Sikhism Jhatka vs Kutha methods of slaughter Kamadhenu a divine bovine in Indian mythology Nandi the bull mount of ShivaRelated International topics Ashvamedha Bovid hybrid Buffalo meat Horse slaughter Religious restrictions on the consumption of pork Whale meat Food and drink prohibitionsNotes edit The protection of cattle and prevention of cattle slaughter is not limited to Buddhists in India but found in other Theravada countries such as Sri Lanka Myanmar and others 80 81 A wealthy banker gold merchant and Jain devotee Shantidas Jhaveri complained to Shah Jahan who asked his son Aurangzeb to return the building 100 Later Aurangzeb overthrew his father from his throne placed him into house arrest and assumed the power as the Emperor 102 In rice growing regions buffalo is important because buffalo pull better in water filled muddy soils 153 References edit a b From Where the Buffalo Roam India s Beef Exports Archived 7 May 2017 at the Wayback Machine Maurice Landes Alex Melton and Seanicaa Edwards June 2016 United States Department of Agriculture pages 1 6 R Ganguli 1931 Cattle and Cattle rearing in Ancient India Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute Vol 12 No 3 1931 pp 216 230 H Saddhatissa 2013 The Sutta Nipata A New Translation from the Pali Canon Routledge p 33 ISBN 978 1 136 77293 1 How Brahmins Lived by the Dharma Early Buddhist texts translations and parallels Sutta Central Lisa Kemmerer 2011 Animals and World Religions 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10 1086 202723 S2CID 146903762 Richard L Warms 2009 Sacred Realms Readings in the Anthropology of Religion Oxford University Press p 449 ISBN 978 0 19 534132 4 Quote First the ban on cattle slaughter is part of the general doctrine of ahimsa causing no hurt to living beings It is not only cattle that are protected by ahimsa but other animals as well a b The states where cow slaughter is legal in India The Indian Express 8 October 2015 Retrieved 24 August 2018 SC upholds cow slaughter ban The Times of India TNN 27 October 2005 Archived from the original on 20 September 2013 Retrieved 19 November 2013 SC upholds ban on cow slaughter Cow slaughter States urged to introduce law The Hindu 17 November 2005 Archived from the original on 9 March 2015 SC Laws prohibiting cow slaughter constitutional Ban on cow slaughter in 24 Indian states is leading to dead humans on the border 11 November 2014 Prime Cuts S Rukmini 4 March 2015 Cattle slaughter in varying degrees The Hindu Maharashtra s beef ban shows how politicians manipulate Hindu sentiments around cow slaughter 3 March 2015 the fact is that cow slaughter is banned in 24 states The Times of India 6 October 2015 The states where cow slaughter is legal in India 8 October 2015 Graphic Mapping cow slaughter in Indian states 7 October 2015 Cow slaughter allowed in most northeastern states Bengal The Times of India 3 April 2017 Sikkim Passes Bill Banning Cow Slaughter a b Centre s Move to Gut Article 370 Lifts Beef Ban from J amp K MINISTRY OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY Buffalo meat exports at over Rs 21K cr in 10 mths in FY 17 27 March 2017 Nirmala slams Akhilesh says beef exports already banned 2 October 2015 Meat export banned only boneless varieties allowed smetimes in Retrieved 7 August 2018 F J Simoons 1980 John R K Robson ed Food Ecology and Culture Readings in the Anthropology of Dietary Practices Taylor amp Francis pp 122 127 ISBN 978 0 677 16090 0 Quote and shall in particular take steps for preserving and improving the 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incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Steven Wilkinson 2004 Myron Weiner Ashutosh Varshney and Gabriel Almond ed India and the Politics of Developing Countries Essays in Memory of Myron Weiner SAGE Publications p 160 ISBN 9780761932871 Wilkinson Steven I 2006 Votes and Violence Electoral Competition and Ethnic Riots in India Cambridge University Press p 117 ISBN 9780521536059 a b c d Smith Donald Eugene 2015 India as a Secular State Princeton University Press pp 486 488 ISBN 9781400877782 Quote Although Nehru had declared that this cow slaughter law was a matter for the states to decide for themselves he did not hesitate to criticize the U P decision as a wrong step The U P bill was passed and similar legislation imposing a total ban on cow slaughter has been enacted in Bihar Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan All of these governments of course have been controlled by the Congress party Wilkinson Steven I 2006 Votes and Violence Electoral Competition and Ethnic Riots in India Cambridge University Press pp 117 119 with footnotes ISBN 9780521536059 Prabhakaran P Soman M Iyer R P and Abraham J 1980 Common disease conditions among cattle slaughtered in Trichur municipal slaughter house a preliminary study Kerala Journal of Veterinary Science Vol 11 No 1 pages 159 163 a b c For New Breed of Rustlers Nothing Is Sacred Gardiner Harris 26 May 2013 The New York Times Rosanna Masiola Renato Tomei 2015 Law Language and Translation From Concepts to Conflicts Springer pp 43 46 ISBN 978 3 319 14271 5 Rosanna Masiola Renato Tomei 2015 Law Language and Translation From Concepts to Conflicts Springer p 45 ISBN 978 3 319 14271 5 Quote Increasing meat consumption has meant that holy cows are a target for unscrupulous thieves a b c Buncombe Andrew 1 June 2012 Nothing s sacred the illegal trade in India s holy cows The Independent Retrieved 27 June 2017 In Assam mob fury and cattle thieves have a long history Samudra Gupta Kashyap 2 May 2017 The Indian Express T N Madan 1995 Muslim communities of South Asia culture society and power Manohar p 98 ISBN 978 81 7304 090 0 David Gilmartin 2003 Cattle crime and colonialism Property as negotiation in north India The Indian Economic amp Social History Review Volume 40 Issue 1 pages 33 56 Gene R Thursby 1975 Hindu Muslim Relations in British India BRILL Academic pp 78 82 ISBN 90 04 04380 2 A novel trick to lift cattle The Daily Star 29 August 2016 Zahoor A Rather 2013 India Bangladesh Border Issues Challenges and Opportunities Volume 50 Issue 1 2 pages 130 144 a b Deryck O Lodrick 2005 Symbol and Sustenance Cattle in South Asian Culture Dialectical Anthropology 29 1 61 84 doi 10 1007 s10624 005 5809 8 S2CID 144108959 People s Union for Democratic Rights 2009 Dalit Lynching at Dulina Cow Protection Caste and Communalism in Ujjwal Kumar Singh ed Human Rights and Peace Ideas Laws Institutions and Movements SAGE Publications pp 155 57 ISBN 978 81 7829 884 9 a b Susan Bayly 2001 Caste Society and Politics 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Attitudes pp 23 40 People s Union for Democratic Rights 2009 Dalit Lynching at Dulina Cow Protection Caste and Communalism in Ujjwal Kumar Singh ed Human Rights and Peace Ideas Laws Institutions and Movements SAGE Publications p 155 ISBN 978 81 7829 884 9 People s Union for Democratic Rights 2009 Dalit Lynching at Dulina Cow Protection Caste and Communalism in Ujjwal Kumar Singh ed Human Rights and Peace Ideas Laws Institutions and Movements SAGE Publications p 155 ISBN 978 81 7829 884 9 Quote The practice of selling off ageing and sick and dry cows is something the dominant and subordinate castes have historically practiced People s Union for Democratic Rights 2009 Dalit Lynching at Dulina Cow Protection Caste and Communalism in Ujjwal Kumar Singh ed Human Rights and Peace Ideas Laws Institutions and Movements SAGE Publications p 157 ISBN 978 81 7829 884 9 Brigitte Sebastia 2016 Eating Traditional Food Politics Identity and Practices Taylor amp Francis pp 10 11 116 122 ISBN 978 1 317 28594 6 a b c d e f Marvin Harris 1978 India s sacred cow Human Nature 1 2 28 36 Britha Mikkelsen 2005 Methods for Development Work and Research A New Guide for Practitioners SAGE Publications p 328 ISBN 978 0 7619 3328 1 Bonnie Kime Scott Susan E Cayleff Anne Donadey et al 2016 Women in Culture An Intersectional Anthology for Gender and Women s Studies John Wiley amp Sons p 316 ISBN 978 1 118 54112 8 Marvin Harris 2007 James M Henslin ed Down to Earth Sociology 14th Edition Simon and Schuster pp 465 466 ISBN 978 1 4165 3620 8 a b c d Animals on way to slaughterhouse treated inhumanly Vijay V Singh The Times of India 10 June 2017 PETA Calls on all States to Stop Illegal Slaughter of Animals as Per Supreme Court Order Nikunj Sharma and Shambhavi Tiwari PETA India 31 March 2017 a b Supreme Court stays high court judgment on cow slaughter The Times of India 24 January 2017 a b Yang Anand A 1980 Sacred Symbol and Sacred Space in Rural India Community Mobilization in the Anti Cow Killing 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2012 Riots and After in Mumbai Chronicles of Truth and Reconciliation SAGE Publications pp 22 37 55 58 73 82 ISBN 978 81 321 1935 7 Robb Peter 1986 The Challenge of Gau Mata British Policy and Religious Change in India 1880 1916 Modern Asian Studies Cambridge University Press 20 2 285 319 doi 10 1017 s0026749x00000846 S2CID 143824510 India Cow Protection Spurs Vigilante Violence Prosecute Assailants Protect Targeted Minorities Human Rights Watch 27 April 2017 People s Union for Democratic Rights 2009 Dalit Lynching at Dulina Cow Protection Caste and Communalism in Ujjwal Kumar Singh ed Human Rights and Peace Ideas Laws Institutions and Movements SAGE Publications p 155 ISBN 978 81 7829 884 9 Quote It needs to be recalled that the very first response of the VHP and the Gauraksha Samiti was to glorify the killings as just retribution for the sin of cow slaughter The social identity of the victims appeared unimportant except that they were possibly cow slaughterers People s Union for Democratic Rights 2009 Dalit Lynching at Dulina Cow Protection Caste and Communalism in Ujjwal Kumar Singh ed Human Rights and Peace Ideas Laws Institutions and Movements SAGE Publications p 155 ISBN 978 81 7829 884 9 Quote Noticeably none of the groups concerned including the state disputed that the response of the mob was a completely understandable response to cow slaughter The emphasis was rather on the truth value of the allegation itself It is evident that the issue of cow protection is central to an understanding of the incident Protests held across India after attacks against Muslims Reuters 28 June 2017 Archived from the original on 9 October 2020 Retrieved 29 June 2017 a b D K Sadana 5 April 2021 India needs to look beyond gaushalas to address its stray cattle problem DownToEarth Retrieved 25 December 2021 Sultanpur Gorakhpur Siddharthnagar Ashutosh Mishra 11 January 2022 Stray animals destroy crops in UP districts as goshalas remain non starters India Today Archived from the original on 20 February 2022 Retrieved 20 February 2022 Yogi Adityanath government stares at UP farmers backlash as cattle destroy crops The New Indian Express 10 February 2019 Archived from the original on 23 February 2022 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Next to Adityanath s Rally Ground in Rae Bareli Is a Shelter Where Cows Die Every Day The Wire 22 February 2022 Retrieved 23 February 2022 71 Kg Of Waste Found In Stomach Of Stray Faridabad Cow NDTV com 4 March 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 The States Subjects List Vakilbabu com Retrieved 25 March 2013 Seventh Schedule Constitution org Retrieved 25 March 2013 The Constitution of India Part IV PDF Ministry of Law and Justice p 21 Archived from the original PDF on 23 February 2014 Retrieved 8 November 2013 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b c Report of the National Commission on Cattle Chapter II 17 Legislation regarding ban on Cow slaughter DAHD Archived from the original on 9 November 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which is in the public domain Chapter IV Legislation Part I Retrieved 26 November 2014 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain MP goes tough on cow slaughter The Times of India 4 January 2012 Archived from the original on 5 May 2013 Retrieved 19 September 2012 Rahman Maseeh 29 May 2000 Is Nothing Sacred Time Asia Archived from the original on 9 March 2012 Retrieved 25 February 2008 Sacred No Longer Advocates for Animals Summer 2004 Archived from the original on 13 October 2004 Retrieved 25 February 2008 Cow thefts on the rise in India For new breed of rustlers nothing is sacred The Times of India 27 May 2013 Archived from the original on 27 May 2013 Retrieved 27 November 2014 a b c d Report of the National Commission on Cattle Chapter II 11 Constituent Assembly Debates DAHD Archived from the original on 9 November 2013 Retrieved 8 November 2013 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Chapter II Executive Summary Section 13 Government of India Archived from the original on 9 November 2013 Retrieved 18 March 2013 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b c d e Report of the National Commission on Cattle Chapter II 12 Cattle protection in the post Independence era DAHD Archived from the original on 9 November 2013 Retrieved 8 November 2013 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Report of the National Commission on Cattle ANNEX II 8 Gist of State Legislations on Cow Slaughter DAHD Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 8 November 2013 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b c d e f g Beefed up law The Telegraph 18 January 2012 Retrieved 8 November 2013 Assam bans sale of beef within 5 km radius of any temple passes Cattle Preservation Bill Zee News 14 August 2021 Retrieved 14 August 2021 Assam Assembly passes cow protection Bill The Hindu 14 August 2021 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 14 August 2021 a b c d Can Restaurants in India Legally Serve Beef The Wall Street Journal 21 May 2012 Retrieved 19 November 2013 Current Articles HJS Ban cow slaughter in Goa Times of India The Times of India Retrieved 20 April 2017 Gujarat Assembly passes Bill on cow slaughter The Hindu PTI 27 September 2011 Retrieved 19 November 2013 7 years jail for cow slaughter in Gujarat Zee News 27 September 2011 Retrieved 19 November 2013 India s Battle Over Beef The Wall Street Journal 2 May 2012 Retrieved 19 November 2013 Gujarat to punish cow slaughter with 14 year jail Times of India The Times of India Retrieved 2 April 2017 Gujarat India state approves life term for killing cows BBC News 31 March 2017 Retrieved 2 April 2017 Langa Mahesh Gujarat to tighten cow slaughter law The Hindu Retrieved 2 April 2017 Life term for killing cows Chief Minister Vijay Rupani says want vegetarian Gujarat The Indian Express 1 April 2017 Retrieved 2 April 2017 a b Beef Ban Haryana Assembly passes Gauvansh Sanrakshan and Gausamvardhan Bill 2015 States Stats indiatoday intoday in Archived from the original on 9 December 2016 Retrieved 5 April 2017 J amp K administration makes u turn on cow slaughter ban on Bakra Eid 16 July 2021 J amp K HC refuses to entertain plea seeking reenactment of cow slaughter ban law 12 February 2021 Beef is not banned in J amp K says BJP leader forgets 157 year old law against cow slaughter 4 April 2019 a b Paliath Shreehari 8 February 2022 New Anti Cattle Slaughter Law In Karnataka Causing Loss Of Livelihoods www indiaspend com Retrieved 23 December 2022 Karnataka govt promulgates anti cow slaughter ordinance 5 January 2021 Karnataka anti cow slaughter ordinance now a law after Governor gives assent 5 January 2021 Karnataka governor promulgates stringent anti cow slaughter ordinance 5 January 2021 http www gangothri org sites userfiles1 edocs KPRA courtcases pdf Archived 12 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine 2274 S 231 There is a ban on slaughtering of animals in any place in the Panchayat except in a licensed slaughter house See Panchayat Raj Slaughter Houses and Meat Stalls Rules 1996 Kerala R 3 G Sivarajan J John Mathew v Vechoochira Grama Panchayat 1999 3 KLT 243 1999 2 KLJ 610 AIR 2000 Ker 65 Unit level NSSO Data for 68th round 2015 2016 Department of Animal Husbandry Dairying and Fisheries 2015 2016 Unit level NSSO Data for 68th round Retrieved 8 June 2017 a b Some ban some restrict a few don t The Indian Express 4 January 2012 Retrieved 4 June 2013 Since the meat is a requirement of the people of the Panchayat at for their food and since it is an obligation on the part of the Panchayat to provide for meat stalls in the public markets maintained by the Panchayat and since by the present order the first respondent is interdicted from auctioning the right to vend meat in the places mentioned in Ex P1 notice the first respondent will take immediate steps for establishment of slaughter houses as provided under the Act and the Rules John Mathew v Vechoochira Grama Panchayat 1999 3 KLT 243 1999 2 KLJ 610 AIR 2000 Ker 65 Madhya pradesh agricultural Cattle preservation act 1959 Maharashtra CM Fadnvais assures protection to beef traders 11 February 2015 Beef banned in Maharashtra 5 yrs jail Rs10 000 fine for possession or sale 25 March 2015 Sudhir Mungantiwar What is communal about ban on cow bullock slaughter 6 March 2015 Muslim chamber welcomes cow slaughter ban 4 March 2015 http rajassembly nic in BillsPdf Bill16 2015 VHP demands ban on cow slaughter in Tripura threatens stir Hindustan Times 2 April 2018 Retrieved 2 May 2021 Cattle smuggling slaughter in UP now punishable under National Security Act Hindustan Times 6 June 2017 Retrieved 8 June 2017 Further reading editMarvin Harris Good to Eat Riddles of Food and Culture Waveland Press Michael Charles Tobias World War III Population and the Biosphere at the End of the Millennium Bear amp Co 1994 Second Edition Continuum The British Origin of Cow slaughter in India By Dharampal T M Mukundan Society for Integrated Development of Himalayas Mussourie 2002 ISBN 8187827041External links editDepartment of Animal Husbandry Dairying and Fisheries Report of the National Commission on Cattle July 2002 Archived 28 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine Various Committees on Cattle Government of India Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cattle slaughter in India amp oldid 1200840455, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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