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Indian Muslims Attacked For Selling Meat

couple of weeks back one thief was caught in our locality. Locals thrashed him up before handing over to police. The thief was a muslim. Lets make a thread on PDF. :welcome:
how dare they beat a peaceful, pious Muslim going about his business. :pissed:
 
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Do you have any evidence they are not?
Yes. Because Hinduism is a religion of peace. No Hindus can do that. You have said that they are Hindus. You must show first. Then I will show( May be some verses from our holy book.).
 
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I understand what the issue is; Issue is, a poor shop keeper has been trashed by Hindu terrorists and his meat has been destroyed in the pretext of him selling beef (cow or buffalo?). On the other hand, Indian government is exporting beef. So if the Indian government exports beef it is OK, if a poor shopkeeper does that, its blasphemy? Now some member has said that buffalo meat is not cow, alright. But how did the beaters know that the shopkeeper was selling cow and not buffalo? Only because he was Muslim, it was assumed he was selling cow?
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Hindu terrorists?
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issue was between two people not on relgion but on trade ..
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indian govt do export large amount meat ...
but some state have BAN...on it...
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its not about muslim .. simple...
rest you decide..
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UPA's Pink Revolution Makes India World's Biggest Beef Exporter -The New Indian Express
 
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Absolutely correct. Can anyone provide any evidence that he was beaten up by Hindus ? If not then its an propaganda.

It is just a cleverly worded article that is designed to mislead those with limited brain capacity :P ......and looks like they succeeded.

The last line of the report clearly stated that it was a dispute between the shopkeeper and the customers :lol: ....... the only customers who would buy beefs are Christians or Muslim :devil:
 
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@Icewolf and other PDF member
we appriciate your concern but understnad issuse at FULLL..
this article will help ...
india as state have or had nothing NEG aginat any community...
our constitution majorily done by guy .Dr.Babasaheh Ambedkar who was dalit and outcast..
we have few people have diffrent view of india and Hindutava...
as few things not allowed in Hindu relgion so it ban ... not becase its muslim...
same goes for muslim relgious activities tooo..
in 1.21 billion people some clashes bound to happed
but dont make lok ike hnidu musim rively at lage issue...
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for
Gujrat ...
our indian SC which itslef conducted investgation cleared naredra modi
that enough for us..
you may show bad consition ranking of indina jusdiciary.. in world..
but that on lower court and large number of case
out HC and SC are have men of integrity and it shown no MERCY to anyone if broke rule..
if you want to take it the take it ..if not ok ..
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We both are not g8 country for our minority...
both are underdevelop , undereducted, under represented..
so fingering each other will not soalve issue..
rather use good practice, policy,, initivative to compete who can do better not in who can do worst ..
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Some ban, some restrict, a few don’t - Indian Express
Some ban, some restrict, a few don’t
Agencies : Wed Jan 04 2012, 02:49 hrs
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Total Ban
GUJARAT: The Gujarat Animal Preservation Act, 2011, introduced by the BJP government during Diwali, bans the slaughter of cows (and their progeny) as well as the sale, purchase or transportation of beef. The maximum imprisonment is, as in the new MP law, of seven years.

Karnataka: A 1964 law allowed slaughter of cattle under certain conditions. Now, the BJP government has framed a much stricter law not only banning slaughter but also allowing search and seizure. The Karnataka Prevention of Slaughter and Preservation of Cattle Bill, 2010, passed by the legislature, opposed by the Congress and JDS, and yet to receive the Governor's assent, proposes imprisonment up to seven years and fines up to Rs 1 lakh. The Bill includes a search-and-seizure clause empowering police officers of the rank of sub-inspector or above, and accords immunity to authorities implementing the law.

Uttar Pradesh: The UP Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act prescribes imprisonment up to seven years, as per an amendment in effect since 2002, a police officer says. Consumption of canned beef is allowed but sale or transportation of cattle for the purpose of slaughtering will invite prosecution. The officer says someone caught slaughtering frequently can face charges under the Gangster Act and the National Security Act.

Banned, but...

Himachal pradesh: The ban on cow slaughter here was imposed as way back as in 1979. The Himachal Pradesh Prohibition of Cow Slaughter Act prescribes imprisonment of five years. The Act covers not only cows but also bulls, bullocks, oxen, heifers and calves. Even a person who withholds information about slaughter can be punished with a year in jail. Sale of beef is banned, unless one obtains a licence under the Act. Offences are non-bailable.

Tamil Nadu: A ban on slaughter of cows and heifers is in place since 1976, though not stringently implemented. Consumption of beef is not banned but it is something that divides communities. Beef is available at meat shops, but beef dishes are not served by any major restaurants barring a few.

Punjab & haryana: Both neighbours ban cow slaughter, with Haryana implementing the Punjab Prohibition of Cow Slaughter Act, 1955, which has provisions for imprisonment. Punjab too makes it a criminal offence under various sections of the IPC. It bans the sale of beef though there is no provision for a penalty for its consumption. Neither state has ever had a complaint or case registered for sale of beef.

Bihar: The ban on cow slaughter is guided by a Central law, the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960. It is a cognisable offence and bailable. The Society for Prevention of Cruelty against Animals, which has a unit in every district, becomes the complainant if a cow is slaughtered. Slaughtering a diseased cow is allowed under the law. It is legal to serve beef in restaurants but few actualy do so.

Within Limits

Jharkhand: The Jharkhand Prevention of Cowbreed Animal Slaughter Act, 2005, sets an age limit, with slaughter banned if the animal is less than three years old. There is no ban on consumption of beef. Approved during an earlier tenure of Arjun Munda, the law was notified during that of Shibu Soren. Imprisonment for illegal slaughter can go up to 10 years; causing an injury to such animals, too, is punishable with a fine up to Rs 10,000.

Maharashtra: The Maharashtra Animal Preservation Act, 1976, makes a distinction between animals: it bans the slaughter of cows but allows that of bulls, bullocks, female buffaloes and buffalo calves if a "fit-for-slaughter" certificate is obtained from the comptetent authority. Cow slaughter is punishable by up to six months imprisonment. A bill that aimed to ban slaughter of bulls, too, had been passed by both houses of the legislature in 1995 during the Shiv Sena-BJP government's tenure. That bill is still pending with the President, while the currently ruling Congress-NCP alliance is doing a rethink about it.

West Bengal: The West Bengal Animal Slaughter Control Act, 1950, bans slaughter of healthy cows, with a violation carrying a maximum imprisonment of six months. There is no ban on consumption of beef, or on the slaughter (in a government or municipality slaughterhouse) of an animal certified as fit for this by a veterinary surgeon. The Act exempts slaughter for religious purposes, but the Supreme Court has said such exemptions too would be illegal.

Orissa: The Orissa Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act, 1960, makes slaughter a cognisable offence with a maximum imprisonment of two years or fine up to Rs 1,000 or both. "Cow" includes heifers and calves, while slaughter of bulls and bullocks allowed once given a fit-for-slaughter certificate, or if cattle is over 14 years of age or has become permanently unfit for breeding. Consumption and serving of beef in hotels and homes is allowed.

No Restriction

The northeast: The Assam Cattle Preservation Act, 1951 (amended in 1963), exists but no rules seem to have been framed to regulate or restrict cattle slaughter, which takes place in various parts of the state. Meghalaya, Mizoram and Nagaland, with a predominant Christian population, have no restriction on cattle slaughter and beef is openly sold in cities like Shillong, Dimapur and Aizawl. Arunachal Pradesh has no legislation on cow slaughter, and communities consume the meat of yak and mithun. Tripura has no legislation either. In Manipur, cattle slaughter is restricted under the Proclamation of Maharaja's Durbar Rules of 1939, but beef is largely consumed in the hill districts with large Christian populations.

Kerala: There is no restriction on cow slaughter in a state where beef is eaten by a large section of people. Beef is sold at meat shops while cattle is traded at weekly markets across the state.
 
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Growing beef trade hits India's sacred cow

By Arezou Rezvani, Benjamin Gottlieb and Elise Hennigan, for CNN - April 19, 2012

When 33-year-old Ashoo Mongia visits the supermarket it's rarely for stocking up his fridge for the week. As head of a cow protection enforcement team, he regularly scours Delhi grocery stores and outdoor markets for food products containing cow beef.

For the last 15 years, Mongia and his team of 120 Delhi-based volunteers have thrown themselves in a battle that pits India's billon-dollar meat industry and growing underground beef trade against Hindu traditionalists keen on preserving the holy status of cows.

"The cow is our mother, it's our duty to protect her," said Mongia, who monitors and raids hundreds of stores, butcher shops and slaughterhouses suspected of carrying, selling or slaughtering India's blessed bovines. "We do this because we believe in what the cow represents in our country, our culture and in the Hindu religion."

This year, India will displace the United States as the world's third largest beef exporter, behind Brazil and Australia. In just the first half of 2012, India exported $1.24 billion worth of meat, and a 30 percent growth in revenue from 2010 exports is projected by the end of the year, according to a U.S. Beef Export Federation study.

While the bulk of Indian exports is buffalo meat bound for Middle East and Southeast Asian markets, the growing middle class in Arab countries has sparked a new craving for cow beef. The rise in demand could make India the world's king beef exporter by 2013, according to USDA estimates.

But as India continues its struggle for economic and political dominance in South Asia, there is concern that Hindu-mandated bans on beef could hamper the industry's future growth, particularly in states like Kerala and West Bengal where the practice is legal.

Relied on by generations of Indians for tilling fields, dairy products and dung fuel, the cow is regarded by Hindus as gau mata, or maternal figure, and has had a long-standing central role in India's religious rituals. Those religious attitudes, however, are viewed by some Indian business leaders as a major hindrance to commerce.

"Cow beef could be a very lucrative business in India," said Dr. S.K. Ranjhan, the director of Hind Agro Industries Limited, who believes that religious attitudes may stand to change once the extent of business opportunities are realized. "I think five-to-10 years from now, people won't be so scandalized by the sale of cow beef."

The majority of India's 24 states outlaw the slaughter of cows except under extenuating circumstances: to stifle contagious diseases, prevent pain and suffering, medical research, etc. And several states -- including Delhi and Rajasthan, among others -- ban the sale and slaughter of cows altogether.

The strict laws against cow slaughter in the majority of India's provinces have forced the lucrative cow beef trade underground. An estimated 1.5 million cows, valued at up to $500 million, are smuggled out of India annually, which some analysts say provide more than 50% of beef consumed in neighboring Bangladesh.

"When you consider just how much money is made from underground cow smuggling, it becomes clear that not only is there a huge amount at stake, but a huge demand that butchers and slaughterhouses are catering to," said Dr. Zarin Ahmad, a fellow at the Centre de Sciences Humaines in New Delhi, who has extensively studied the work and trade among India's butcher communities.

Working with Mongia's enforcement team is Parmanand Mittal, a cow-advocacy lawyer who works from a home-office on the outskirts of Delhi. Throughout the day, Mittal fields a stream of phone calls -- tipsters who have caught wind of illegal slaughterhouses and owners of gau shalas, or cow sanctuaries, concerned with unexpected expenses associated with new rescues.

In Mittal's office hangs a painting of Lord Krishna — one of the most revered divinities in Hinduism— with his arm resting affectionately on a white calf. While Mongia's crew breaks up the slaughterhouses, Mittal builds a legal case for prosecution. His backlog of casework extensive, Mittal says.

While there might be money to be made from adding cow beef to current exports, India would incur costs elsewhere, Mittal says.

"Cows have long been the source of fuel, manure and fertilizer, among other things. These animals are revered because they've played a large role in the welfare and livelihood of all Indians," Mittal said. "Take away the cow and the repercussions will be huge."

 
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Yes. Because Hinduism is a religion of peace. No Hindus can do that. You have said that they are Hindus. You must show first. Then I will show( May be some verses from our holy book.).

Mods please ban this troll
 
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Lets see...

If I introduce the pork to Saudi Arabia - What would happen to me?

Saudi Arabia doesn't act high mighty and secular like India ... They have clean cut laws for violations unlike India
 
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