7.1 C
London
Sunday, April 21, 2024
HomeNewsIndia NewsIndian beef traders call off strike, look to courts

Indian beef traders call off strike, look to courts

Date:

Related stories

India elections 2024: What we learned this week

THE first of India’s almost one billion voters cast...

Around 64 per cent voter turnout in first phase of India election

POLLING for the first phase of India’s marathon national...

India starts voting as Modi aims for third term

India’s polling stations opened on Friday as prime minister...

Explosions in Iran after possible Israeli strike: What we know so far

Explosions were reported in Isfahan, a central province of...

Prince Harry declares US as his new home, renounces British residency

Prince Harry has officially declared the United States as...

 

FACED with dwindling business, Indian beef traders called off a month-long strike against a beef ban on Wednesday (April 1) and decided to mount a legal challenge to the government.

Maharashtra, India's second most populous state, extended a ban on killing cows to bulls and bullocks in early March.

Cows are considered sacred by many Indians, but beef is eaten by some poor and lower-caste Hindus as well as by Christians and Muslims. Campaigns to protect cattle are often used to vilify religious minorities.

"We have called off the strike as no solution was coming and our families have been suffering," said Mohammed Ali Qureshi, president of the Bombay Suburban Beef Dealers Association.

"But we will not stop here and will go to court against this ban which has rendered several thousand people jobless."

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has backed the clamp down on the beef trade, which is run mostly by Muslims. Other states ruled by the BJP, such as Jharkhand and Haryana, have also tightened curbs.

"Our children were dying of hunger because of the strike. We had no option but to resume to work," said Mohammed Shareef Qureshi, a supplier at Deonar, the site of India's biggest abattoir on the outskirts of Mumbai.

About 250 buffaloes were slaughtered in Deonar on Wednesday as against 400-450 cattle daily before the ban was imposed, president Qureshi said.

Early this week, home minister Rajnath Singh said the government would use "all our might" to ban cow slaughter.

 

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

one + 7 =