NEW
DELHI: Indian meat traders plan to take the government to court over new
rules banning the trading of cattle including buffalo for slaughter,
calling it a move by Prime Minister Narendra Modi´s administration to
hurt the business run mainly by Muslims.
The environment ministry said this week
that animal markets will only be able to trade in cattle meant for
agricultural purposes, the biggest blow yet for meat suppliers facing
several reverses under Modi´s three-year old Hindu nationalist
government.
government.
The slaughter of cows, considered holy
in Hinduism, is banned in most Indian states and laws on the issue have
become more stringent over the past few years.
Muslims, who make up 14 percent of India´s 1.3 billion people, dominate the Indian meat industry.
India is the biggest seller of buffalo
meat in the world, with exports of more than $4 billion a year to
countries such as Vietnam, Malaysia and Egypt.
But that could change following the
government´s May 23 notification regarding changes to the Prevention of
Cruelty to Animals Act, made public on Friday.
It requires owners to declare that
cattle have not "been brought to market for sale for slaughter" and for
market committees to verify that the buyer is an "agriculturist by
seeing the relevant revenue document".
The new rules define cattle as bulls, cows, buffalo, steers, heifers, calves and camels.
"The business is dead," said Aqil
Qureshi, president of the Delhi Buffalo Traders´ Welfare Association who
runs a slaughterhouse outside the city and sells hides to
leather companies.
"We will take legal help, we will hit the streets.
Who does not fight for their
livelihood?"The environment ministry said in a statement on
Saturday that the regulation was to protect "animals from cruelty and
not to regulate the existing trade in cattle for slaughter houses".
Animals for slaughter will have to be bought from farmers directly, it said.
Abdul Faheem Qureshi, a lawyer in the southern city of Hyderabad and head of the All India Jamiatul Quresh Action Committee, said direct buying was "not always practical" and that he was drafting a court appeal after meeting with many of his "shocked" trader clients.
Abdul Faheem Qureshi, a lawyer in the southern city of Hyderabad and head of the All India Jamiatul Quresh Action Committee, said direct buying was "not always practical" and that he was drafting a court appeal after meeting with many of his "shocked" trader clients.
Al Faheem Meatex, an exporter in the
northern state of Uttar Pradesh, said buying buffalo directly from
farmers was likely to raise costs, given stringent norms on cattle
transportation.
"It will raise costs for us but what else can we do?" the company said.
"We will see if we can get some relief from the court.
"We will see if we can get some relief from the court.
"Qureshi said the new law would only embolden cow vigilantism groups.
Muslims have been assaulted by Hindu
hardliners over the past few years on suspicion of eating beef or
illegally transporting cattle.
GVL Narasimha Rao, a spokesman for Modi´s Bharatiya Janata Party, had no immediate comment.
Government spokesman Frank Noronha did not respond to requests for comment.
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