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Consider total ban on beef across nation in 3 months, HP HC tells Centre

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Yep...Sanghi curriculum is God sent absolute truth and whatever you see with your own eye is an illusion.

Were you not the same guy crying about Sanghis burning down the church in Delhi and Christian persecution by RSS? So much for your credibility.
 
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What has Shakha taught you? that its bairooni saazish to malign poor sanghis?

Were you not the same guy crying about Sanghis burning down the church in Delhi and Christian persecution by RSS? So much for your credibility.
 
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Its free of cost i think.

12-digit unique ID numbers on the lines of ‘Aadhaar’ to counter illegal trade, track their breed, location, breeding cycle and milk production, said animal husbandry department officials on Friday.

The ID card will be fixed as a tag around its ears and the owners will get a booklet where they would fill cow data every day.

Owners will get a booklet where they would fill cows’ ‘data’ every day.

“Owners will also have to fill a questionnaire, which will comprise details of owners like address, phone numbers. The details will be fed on National Dairy Development Board’s database with special identification tags of cattle such as their photographs, age, race, complexion and body structure,”

"The purpose is to carry out a census and keep a record. Besides, this will help to verify mattes if someone feeds us wrong information about pet animals or animals working in the field.

“Not only Muslims, but all Hindus are also being asked to submit the details of the cows and bullocks they possess. But there are many Muslims who domesticate animals without any intention of consuming it.

These records will prove that Muslims don’t buy cows and bullocks just for slaughtering and it will help to defuse communal tension between Hindus and Muslims

How can it be even free of cost? Booklet, cow data, tracking, unique ID, record keeping, database maintainance. Too much to be free of cost.
 
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How can it be even free of cost? Booklet, cow data, tracking, unique ID, record keeping, database maintainance. Too much to be free of cost.

Its Aadhar card . Government is paying salaries to the Government employees for this.

All the animals could be tagged in a manner that they can be traced using the GPS/GPRS system in the event of a disease outbreak.


No documents are required to be submitted by the farmer.

The farmer should register all his local (non-descript) cattle & buffalo with the local Veterinary Dispensary or Veterinary Hospital free of cost.
 
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Dog is man's best friend. Dog should be given aadhar card first.
 
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Members of Muslim Mahila Foundation (MMF) feeding a cow and appeals for cow conservation in Varanasi.

424361-dpz-20ocab-06.jpg
 
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http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...court-bench/article19559621.ece?homepage=true

A nine-judge bench of the Supreme Court has said that “nobody would like to be told what to eat or how to dress” while ruling that these activities come under the realm of privacy.
The Supreme Court on August 25, 2017 said its verdict declaring right to privacy a fundamental right would have “some bearing” in matters related to the possession of beef in Maharashtra.

The apex court made the observation while hearing a batch of appeals filed against the Bombay High Court’s May 6, 2016 verdict decriminalising the possession of beef in case of animals slaughtered outside the State.

A bench comprising Justices A.K. Sikri and Ashok Bhushan was informed by an advocate that the August 24, 2017 judgement from a nine-judge Constitution bench, declaring right to privacy a fundamental right, was important for adjudication of the appeal. “Yes, that judgement will have some bearing in these matters,” the bench said.

The Supreme Court on August 24, 2017 said “nobody would like to be told what to eat or how to dress” while ruling that these activities come under the realm of the right to privacy.

Senior advocate Indira Jaising, appearing for some of the petitioners, referred to the privacy judgement and said the right to eat food of one’s choice is now protected under privacy. She also told the bench that Maharashtra government’s appeal challenging the High Court verdict was already pending before another bench of the apex court. The bench, after hearing the submissions, posted the matter after two weeks.

The Maharashtra government on August 10, 2017 moved the apex court challenging the High Court’s verdict striking down sections 5(d) and 9(b) of the Maharashtra Animals Preservation (Amendment) Act, 1995, which criminalised and imposed punishment on persons found in possession of beef of animals, slaughtered in or outside the State, on the ground that it infringed upon a person’s “right to privacy”.

The court had issued notice on the appeal and tagged the matter along with several pending pleas related to the issue.

The High Court had termed “unconstitutional” the provisions which held that mere possession of beef was a crime, saying only “conscious possession” of the meat of animals slaughtered in the State would be an offence.

The Maharashtra government plea assailed the judgement, saying the restriction imposed by the 1995 Act on possession of flesh of cow, bull or bullock could not be interpreted and concluded to be an infringement of “right to privacy”. The State government had said the High Court “while coming to the finding that right to privacy forms part of the fundamental right to personal liberty guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution, ought to have appreciated that right to privacy was not yet designated as a fundamental right”.

The plea had said that according to the verdict, obligation upon the state to prove “conscious possession” of beef would “constitute an unsurmountable circumstance readily available to the wrongdoer to escape sentence”.

In its judgement, the High Court had upheld the ban on slaughter of bulls and bullocks imposed by the Maharashtra government, but decriminalised possession of beef in case the animals were slaughtered outside the State.

The judgement had come on a batch of petitions filed in the High Court challenging the constitutional validity of the Act and, in particular, the possession and consumption of beef of animals slaughtered outside Maharashtra.
 
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