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What a way to deflect? Huh? The same Muslim/Christian destroy Hindu blah blah.. This is the verbal vomitting of what is injected in Sakha. Be a human again. Leave the Sakha. Read what your kind are - Terrorists. I'm interacting with a Hindu terrorist right now. @Mugwop

View attachment 403951

I am sorry man I can't do anything I am not a mod.Perhaps @The Eagle or @Slav Defence can help.
Btw that hindu extremist dinesh lives in Australia a country founded by christians and spends his miserable life on PDF which is dominated by muslims.:lol:
 
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Posting one off cases against Muslims and Christians is what a Sanghi can do. Can we count the number of Churches, Mosques destroyed by Rabid Sanghi dogs? Can we count the numbers in thousands killed by RSS terrorists in rioting and false flag attacks including Hindus? Can we accept a fanatic rightwing is in power right now in India? Do you all forgot what happened in Gujarat, Kandhamal and happening all over India? Did you all forgot what RSS Karsevaks did in 1992 demolishing Babri Masjid? Can't your ilk see what a Sanghini has proclaimed - She wants all those who ate Beef to have their heads decapitated (Source). Can't you see that Islamic terror is minuscule in comparison to majority Hindutva terror looming over India? You've elected Yogi Adityanath and such types. You can't see anything wrong in it. Use the same Muslim/Christian threat like a goat braying!

The fact is that, many Hindus are pretending to be sleeping. Most seems to be soft on Hindutva terror. My belief is that minorities must be aware of the turbulent phase India is going through. You can be made Dhimmis by the Brahmin Terrorists (RSS).

So, the usual RSS Sakha lessons on "blame everything on Muslims/Christians and organize Hindus and radicalise them" is not going to cover up RSS/Sanghparivar's real face and agendas. When Islamic terrorism seems slowing down, a new dawn of Hindu Terror is growing up in India. Accept the inferiority of your kinds fanatism and revert back to be a human being. Burn all the Sakha teachings, Put Gobar on that photos of Hedgewar and Golwalkar hanging over your walls. Eat a good Beef Tenderloin Steak and open up that close, primitive mind which is in slavery of RSS.
Dude, calm down please. Takeiteasy please Take it Easy. :-)

Frankly I have not heard of RSS killing 1000s in false flag attacks either. Where do you get this information?

As far as I can see, christians and Muslims are able to go to church or mosque and worship as they please. ...every day if they want to.....no one is stopping them. People have no fear in openly professing their religion. I hear the call to prayer from my house several times a day from the local mosque. Nobody is stopping them....I wish they would turn it down..... because it is loud and intrusive.

I don't know what you get this upset about? What happened? Did anyone personally threaten you or yours?

..the political pendulum n India has swung to the right....a little too right IMO....and some of the stuff going on is very silly and unacceptable. Politicians are manipulating the gullible - I'll give you that much.

....but dude have you ever asked yourself why there is not ONE SINGLE Pakistani Christian or Hindu or Sikh on this forum ...while there are dozens of Indian minorities? Why do you think that is ? Calm down man. Politics will swing left to right and back...don't give yourself an ulcer over it.

Get permission from mods and I will post even more graphic ones.
These are the one I found that don't really insult Hinduism much.

The rest in our collection, which we are distributing to Hindus by millions, are the ones that will make any Hindu blood boil. you should watch them ;)
Dude, now you're baiting him for your amusement.

If someone has broken the law and there is a law and order problem, the police should deal with it. If they did not, then take it up with the local government ...using it to bully or tease people who had nothing to do with the incident is just that...bullying.
 
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Save your breath, mate. The guy you are quoting, if my memory serves me right, is an Isl*mist - not a Chri*tian. A rabid one, at that.

These guys, the so-called Commies in Kerala (and in WB too), are neither Communists, nor secular. They are just hanging on to power by simply putting Hindus down - for which they will get enough votes from both Christians and Muslims. Unfortunately, they also get enough ignorant Hindus there who can't see through this. In Kerala, you are a Communist as long as you can keep Hinduism out at bay - the Islam and Christianity are all halal.

Where else in the world, do you see Communists, who by definition are supposed to be ANTI-theists, sucking up to people of any religion?!
Cry Loud as much as you can.................Ask any Keralite........
Christians & Muslims are not the Vote Banks of Communist..............
They Vote for Congress rather atheist Communist..........
By the By when BJP President Know as #AlavathiShaji in Kerala met Church..........to woo christian voter......
For BJP Christians are Untouchables is GOA and North east.............Now trying the same formula in Kerala...........
I would like to Quote ,Owaisi....... For BJP,Cow is Mummy in North and Yummy in North East(including Assam)

Hindu Rashtra in incubation............Hope the process finish by 2023
upload_2017-6-16_8-35-43.jpeg



 
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Like I said, we don't need the Hindus who would carry the cut cow head.
One should revisit UP victory and how it was achieved by BJP.

The more the elections become polarized on religious lines, the better it is for BJP.

That's why the whole drama of farmers going on. The opposition don't want the discourse along the lines of religion but don't worry, we will make sure it is.
I reiterate, we don't need all Hindus, we need less than 50% of Hindus support to rule India ;)
 
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An Adivasi Dies and Maybe a Bull Too. Guess Which Death the Gujarat Police is Probing?
By Damayantee Dhar on 16/06/2017


The custodial death of a tribal man and the incarceration of a Dalit and two Muslims, all arrested for cattle slaughter, is seen by locals as part of an extortion racket.
21616416690_3d804b8019_b.jpg

File photo of two bulls and a man, Gujarat. Credit: Adam Cohn/Flickr CC-BY-NC-ND 2.0

Ahmedabad: Allegations about a bull having been slaughtered in the Sabarkantha village of Kotda in April led to the arrest of four men and the mysterious death in custody of one of them. Yet seven weeks later, the exertions of the Gujarat police remain focused on the alleged killing of the bull and not on the circumstances under which the man, Kodarbhai Chapabhai Gamar, an adivasi who was 65 years old, died. The three other men arrested with him remain in custody, despite allegations of torture and extortion against the police.

Most bizarre of all, there is no information about the dead bull. The ‘crime’ is supposed to have occurred in Gamar’s village, Kotda, tucked away in the north-eastern corner of Gujarat bang on the border with Rajasthan. But there are no remains, no witnesses, no blood or flesh samples.

Gamar was arrested on May 2, after a complaint was registered under the state’s recently amended cow slaughter law. The complaint was filed under the Kheroj police station. This was the first FIR under the new Act in the district.

“On the morning of May 2 this year, police sub inspector (PSI) A.S. Rabari raided the houses of Kodar Gamar (my father), Shabber Ahmed Raees Ahmed Sheikh and Imamuddin Nemauddin Padi. All three of them are residents of Kotda. The police then brought them to Lambadya Choraya (the local market place), tied them to a vehicle and assaulted them,” alleged Bhimabhai, one of Gamar’s sons.

“Later Rabari demanded five lakh rupees from their families. The amount, the PSI said, was to guarantee that the three men would not be tortured in custody. My family told Rabari that we are poor tribals and don’t have that kind of money. We pleaded that they not assault our father in custody. But he did not listen. Our father died two days later,” said Bhimabhai.

While the police have denied any foul play in the custodial death which occurred at Kheroj police station in Sabarkantha on May 4, Bhimabhai has written to the chief minister demanding a probe by the Central Bureau of Investigation. Among the allegations made is that Gamar’s death is the result of an extortion racket by local police officers.

Gamar’s family alleges that the police assaulted him twice even before taking him to the police station and demanded a huge amount of money as “guarantee” for not torturing him further in the lock up. Khumu Gamar, another son, claimed that his father was beaten mercilessly by the police at their home before he was taken away.

A custodial ‘confession’, and then three arrests

The police say Gamar was arrested along with Sheikh and Padi after a Dalit from a neighbouring village, Limbabhai Lallubhai Bandi, aged 65, “confessed” that he and the other three men had slaughtered a bull at Kotda.

IMG-20170512-WA0007.jpg

Bharat Solanki, former sarpanch of Lilcha village in Sabarkantha district. Credit: Special Arrangement

But Limbabhai’s family dispute the police story. They allege that his arrest on April 26 was also part of an extortion attempt by the local police and have accused the same officer that Gamar’s sons identified.

“We are Chamars, my father-in-law skins dead animals, mostly bovines, for a living. On the morning of April 26, Limbabhai was informed by some tribals of Kotda village that a bull was dead and asked if he was interested in buying the skin. He agreed, but on his way to Kotda, he was picked up and tortured. The police wanted the names of people who were involved in his business. Breaking down, Lilabhai named four people – three of whom were arrested including two Muslim men (Shabber Ahmed Raees Ahmed Sheikh and Imamuddin Nemauddin Padi) and one tribal man – Kodar Gamar,” said Bharat Solanki, who was sarpanch of Lilcha village in Sabarkantha district until December 2016.

“Limbabhai lives in another village which is one kilometre away from Lilcha. When neighbours told me about his arrest, I rushed to Kheroj police station. The police let me meet him only at 6 pm that day. He had marks of assault on his body and he broke down when he saw me. He pleaded that I should agree to whatever the police demanded. PSI Rabari told me very clearly that if we wanted Limbabhai safe in custody we ought to pay five lakh rupees,” Solanki alleged in a telephone interview with this reporter.

“I did not have that kind of money. Nevertheless, for the sake of the safety of my father-in-law, I collected 120,000 rupees and handed the money over to another policeman, Bhavesh Ramji Parmar on April 28. Yet the police did not release Limbabhai,” claimed Solanki.

No foul play, say police

According to the Kheroj police, Gamar said that he was feeling hot in the lock up and sought permission to have a bath. His health deteriorated after he had a bath, they said, and eventually he died.

“The CCTV footage shows that Kodar Gamar began to vomit while coming out of the bathroom on the day. He soon collapsed and was rushed to the nearest government clinic and then to the civil hospital in Ahmedabad. However he eventually died after probably suffering a brain haemorrhage,” R.G. Brahmbhatt, inspector general (IG) of Sabarkantha Range told the media, dismissing any chances of foul play.

“A post mortem has been conducted and as per protocol in cases of custodial deaths, a judicial inquiry has also been initiated,” Brahmbhatt had stated.

IMG-20170512-WA0004.jpg

Limbabhai Lallubhai Bandi. Credit: Special Arrangement

However, a human rights activist who rushed to the police station after Kodar Gamar was arrested has doubts over the police version of the incident.

“After hearing the news that a poor tribal man was arrested on charges of cow slaughter, some of us rushed to Sabarkantha. But neither Gamar’s family nor us were allowed to meet him when he was still alive,” said advocate Govind Parmar, who is also a member of Human Rights Law Network.

Meanwhile, in Kotda, people insist there was no dead bull, let alone a slaughtered one.

Giving the background to the recent arrests, Sonal, a tribal activist from Kotda who helped Kodar Gamar’s son write to the chief minister told The Wire that the local police had been harassing a Muslim man who goes by the name of Bobby since early April. “He does various kinds of work to earn a living. At times, when he can buy a goat he sells mutton at the village market. One day in early April, the police came and accused him of cow slaughter but he managed to run away. Ever since then, the police have made frequent visits to the market claiming that the meat and blood they found at the spot where Bobby last sold mutton was beef.”

Sonal said that the tribals of Kotda do at times sell dead cattle to those Dalits who skin animals for a living. “Earlier, Kodar Gamar has done this too. But this time, he made no calls to Limbabhai. In fact, there was no dead bull we know of in our village. Moreover, Gamar has been working on a small piece of land the families owns. For the past two years, he had been working at home as he was too old. He has eleven children, five of whom are sons who work in others fields. The Kheroj police have not told us why they believe Gamar was involved in cow slaughtering and why Limbabhai would name him when Gamar did not contact him. The FIR against Gamar also charged him with slaughtering a bull. It is ridiculous that a Dalit of one village, and a tribal and two Muslims of another village were charged with slaughtering a bull at Kotda.”
An RTI filed by Dalit activist Kaushik Parmar revealed that there have been 415 custodial deaths in Gujarat between 2010 and 2016. The State Human Rights Commission (SHRC) has in a reply to Parmar’s RTI said that with 104 cases, Ahmedabad has had the highest number of custodial deaths in this period, followed by Vadodara with 47, Rajkot 38 and Surat 33.
 
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An Adivasi Dies and Maybe a Bull Too. Guess Which Death the Gujarat Police is Probing?
By Damayantee Dhar on 16/06/2017


The custodial death of a tribal man and the incarceration of a Dalit and two Muslims, all arrested for cattle slaughter, is seen by locals as part of an extortion racket.
21616416690_3d804b8019_b.jpg

File photo of two bulls and a man, Gujarat. Credit: Adam Cohn/Flickr CC-BY-NC-ND 2.0

Ahmedabad: Allegations about a bull having been slaughtered in the Sabarkantha village of Kotda in April led to the arrest of four men and the mysterious death in custody of one of them. Yet seven weeks later, the exertions of the Gujarat police remain focused on the alleged killing of the bull and not on the circumstances under which the man, Kodarbhai Chapabhai Gamar, an adivasi who was 65 years old, died. The three other men arrested with him remain in custody, despite allegations of torture and extortion against the police.

Most bizarre of all, there is no information about the dead bull. The ‘crime’ is supposed to have occurred in Gamar’s village, Kotda, tucked away in the north-eastern corner of Gujarat bang on the border with Rajasthan. But there are no remains, no witnesses, no blood or flesh samples.

Gamar was arrested on May 2, after a complaint was registered under the state’s recently amended cow slaughter law. The complaint was filed under the Kheroj police station. This was the first FIR under the new Act in the district.

“On the morning of May 2 this year, police sub inspector (PSI) A.S. Rabari raided the houses of Kodar Gamar (my father), Shabber Ahmed Raees Ahmed Sheikh and Imamuddin Nemauddin Padi. All three of them are residents of Kotda. The police then brought them to Lambadya Choraya (the local market place), tied them to a vehicle and assaulted them,” alleged Bhimabhai, one of Gamar’s sons.

“Later Rabari demanded five lakh rupees from their families. The amount, the PSI said, was to guarantee that the three men would not be tortured in custody. My family told Rabari that we are poor tribals and don’t have that kind of money. We pleaded that they not assault our father in custody. But he did not listen. Our father died two days later,” said Bhimabhai.

While the police have denied any foul play in the custodial death which occurred at Kheroj police station in Sabarkantha on May 4, Bhimabhai has written to the chief minister demanding a probe by the Central Bureau of Investigation. Among the allegations made is that Gamar’s death is the result of an extortion racket by local police officers.

Gamar’s family alleges that the police assaulted him twice even before taking him to the police station and demanded a huge amount of money as “guarantee” for not torturing him further in the lock up. Khumu Gamar, another son, claimed that his father was beaten mercilessly by the police at their home before he was taken away.

A custodial ‘confession’, and then three arrests

The police say Gamar was arrested along with Sheikh and Padi after a Dalit from a neighbouring village, Limbabhai Lallubhai Bandi, aged 65, “confessed” that he and the other three men had slaughtered a bull at Kotda.

IMG-20170512-WA0007.jpg

Bharat Solanki, former sarpanch of Lilcha village in Sabarkantha district. Credit: Special Arrangement

But Limbabhai’s family dispute the police story. They allege that his arrest on April 26 was also part of an extortion attempt by the local police and have accused the same officer that Gamar’s sons identified.

“We are Chamars, my father-in-law skins dead animals, mostly bovines, for a living. On the morning of April 26, Limbabhai was informed by some tribals of Kotda village that a bull was dead and asked if he was interested in buying the skin. He agreed, but on his way to Kotda, he was picked up and tortured. The police wanted the names of people who were involved in his business. Breaking down, Lilabhai named four people – three of whom were arrested including two Muslim men (Shabber Ahmed Raees Ahmed Sheikh and Imamuddin Nemauddin Padi) and one tribal man – Kodar Gamar,” said Bharat Solanki, who was sarpanch of Lilcha village in Sabarkantha district until December 2016.

“Limbabhai lives in another village which is one kilometre away from Lilcha. When neighbours told me about his arrest, I rushed to Kheroj police station. The police let me meet him only at 6 pm that day. He had marks of assault on his body and he broke down when he saw me. He pleaded that I should agree to whatever the police demanded. PSI Rabari told me very clearly that if we wanted Limbabhai safe in custody we ought to pay five lakh rupees,” Solanki alleged in a telephone interview with this reporter.

“I did not have that kind of money. Nevertheless, for the sake of the safety of my father-in-law, I collected 120,000 rupees and handed the money over to another policeman, Bhavesh Ramji Parmar on April 28. Yet the police did not release Limbabhai,” claimed Solanki.

No foul play, say police

According to the Kheroj police, Gamar said that he was feeling hot in the lock up and sought permission to have a bath. His health deteriorated after he had a bath, they said, and eventually he died.

“The CCTV footage shows that Kodar Gamar began to vomit while coming out of the bathroom on the day. He soon collapsed and was rushed to the nearest government clinic and then to the civil hospital in Ahmedabad. However he eventually died after probably suffering a brain haemorrhage,” R.G. Brahmbhatt, inspector general (IG) of Sabarkantha Range told the media, dismissing any chances of foul play.

“A post mortem has been conducted and as per protocol in cases of custodial deaths, a judicial inquiry has also been initiated,” Brahmbhatt had stated.

IMG-20170512-WA0004.jpg

Limbabhai Lallubhai Bandi. Credit: Special Arrangement

However, a human rights activist who rushed to the police station after Kodar Gamar was arrested has doubts over the police version of the incident.

“After hearing the news that a poor tribal man was arrested on charges of cow slaughter, some of us rushed to Sabarkantha. But neither Gamar’s family nor us were allowed to meet him when he was still alive,” said advocate Govind Parmar, who is also a member of Human Rights Law Network.

Meanwhile, in Kotda, people insist there was no dead bull, let alone a slaughtered one.

Giving the background to the recent arrests, Sonal, a tribal activist from Kotda who helped Kodar Gamar’s son write to the chief minister told The Wire that the local police had been harassing a Muslim man who goes by the name of Bobby since early April. “He does various kinds of work to earn a living. At times, when he can buy a goat he sells mutton at the village market. One day in early April, the police came and accused him of cow slaughter but he managed to run away. Ever since then, the police have made frequent visits to the market claiming that the meat and blood they found at the spot where Bobby last sold mutton was beef.”

Sonal said that the tribals of Kotda do at times sell dead cattle to those Dalits who skin animals for a living. “Earlier, Kodar Gamar has done this too. But this time, he made no calls to Limbabhai. In fact, there was no dead bull we know of in our village. Moreover, Gamar has been working on a small piece of land the families owns. For the past two years, he had been working at home as he was too old. He has eleven children, five of whom are sons who work in others fields. The Kheroj police have not told us why they believe Gamar was involved in cow slaughtering and why Limbabhai would name him when Gamar did not contact him. The FIR against Gamar also charged him with slaughtering a bull. It is ridiculous that a Dalit of one village, and a tribal and two Muslims of another village were charged with slaughtering a bull at Kotda.”
An RTI filed by Dalit activist Kaushik Parmar revealed that there have been 415 custodial deaths in Gujarat between 2010 and 2016. The State Human Rights Commission (SHRC) has in a reply to Parmar’s RTI said that with 104 cases, Ahmedabad has had the highest number of custodial deaths in this period, followed by Vadodara with 47, Rajkot 38 and Surat 33.
The bull?
 
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India, Stung by Backlash, Plans to Roll Back Restrictions on Cattle Slaughter
By ELLEN BARRY and SUHASINI RAJJUNE 15, 2017


Photo
16Beef-master768.jpg


Passengers with cattle waited for boats on the bank of the Ganges in Sahibganj, India. Credit Kuni Takahashi for The New York Times
NEW DELHI — India’s Supreme Court on Thursday called on the government to answer charges that stringent new restrictions on cattle slaughter violate constitutional rights to freedom of religion and would impose a “huge economic burden” on some of the country’s poorest families.

Taken aback by the protest that greeted the regulations, a top official said the government planned to pre-empt the legal challenge by revising the new rules.

“Whether we change the language or change the rule, we are doing this on an urgent basis,” said the official, Dr. Harsh Vardhan, union minister of the environment. “We want to set this issue to rest. It should take a few days, a few weeks, not long.”

The rules, announced late last month as part of an act to punish animal cruelty, require anyone selling livestock, which includes buffalo and camels, to produce a written guarantee that animals would not be slaughtered.


Continue reading the main story
They were celebrated by far-right Hindu groups as the latest in a series of legal measures intended to protect cows, which many Hindus consider sacred. A high court in the southern state of Tamil Nadu quickly imposed a four-week stay on the measure, saying it violated Indians’ constitutional right to freedom of religion and encroached on states’ rights.

The Supreme Court on Thursday asked the government to defend the new regulations ahead of a July 11 hearing.

Even with the stay in place, the rules had a chilling effect on livestock markets, already jittery over the proliferation of Hindu cow-protection vigilantes. Representatives of the leather and buffalo meat industries — which together account for around $10 billion in yearly exports — warned that the restrictions would lead to a catastrophic drop in supplies, as well as job losses and company closings.

There was also a political cost. The Bharatiya Janata Party, already popular in the so-called cow belt, has been eager to expand its support in the south and northeast, areas where meat is commonly eaten. B.J.P. leaders in two districts in Meghalaya State announced their resignation from the party, saying that eating meat was intrinsic to their culture.

Dr. Vardhan said the regulations had been widely misunderstood, and there had been no intention to discourage the eating or export of meat. “We do not want to either influence or change the food habits of anybody, neither do we want to affect the slaughtering business in this country,” he said, adding, “We will facilitate their growth, instead of hampering it.”

He said feedback had been solicited from representatives of the beef and leather industries early this year. “We never anticipated that people would have some misunderstanding,” he said.

But industry executives said they had been caught entirely by surprise when the new rules were made public on May 23.

“We were not invited — neither we, nor anyone from the leather industry, nor those who take part in the cattle market — for any discussions before the notification was issued,” said Yusuf Qureshi, who heads an organization in Uttar Pradesh of traditional butchering families, many of whom own large plants that package and export flash-frozen buffalo.

“Nobody was informed or invited to sit across the table for any suggestions,” he said.

Mr. Qureshi said Dr. Vardhan’s comments encouraged him. “We want to be invited on board for a road map which lets us function with peace and respectability,” he said.

It was unclear, however, when or how the rules would be amended. Some officials of the governing party continued to rule out any softening.

“There is no question of withdrawing the notification,” Ramesh Chandappa Jigajinagi, the minister of state for drinking water and sanitation, said in an interview. “We Hindus have been worshiping cows for so long and we should do something for them. Those who are objecting within the party are doing it at their individual level.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/15/world/asia/india-meat-restrictions.html?_r=0
 
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India, Stung by Backlash, Plans to Roll Back Restrictions on Cattle Slaughter
By ELLEN BARRY and SUHASINI RAJJUNE 15, 2017


Photo
16Beef-master768.jpg


Passengers with cattle waited for boats on the bank of the Ganges in Sahibganj, India. Credit Kuni Takahashi for The New York Times
NEW DELHI — India’s Supreme Court on Thursday called on the government to answer charges that stringent new restrictions on cattle slaughter violate constitutional rights to freedom of religion and would impose a “huge economic burden” on some of the country’s poorest families.

Taken aback by the protest that greeted the regulations, a top official said the government planned to pre-empt the legal challenge by revising the new rules.

“Whether we change the language or change the rule, we are doing this on an urgent basis,” said the official, Dr. Harsh Vardhan, union minister of the environment. “We want to set this issue to rest. It should take a few days, a few weeks, not long.”

The rules, announced late last month as part of an act to punish animal cruelty, require anyone selling livestock, which includes buffalo and camels, to produce a written guarantee that animals would not be slaughtered.


Continue reading the main story
They were celebrated by far-right Hindu groups as the latest in a series of legal measures intended to protect cows, which many Hindus consider sacred. A high court in the southern state of Tamil Nadu quickly imposed a four-week stay on the measure, saying it violated Indians’ constitutional right to freedom of religion and encroached on states’ rights.

The Supreme Court on Thursday asked the government to defend the new regulations ahead of a July 11 hearing.

Even with the stay in place, the rules had a chilling effect on livestock markets, already jittery over the proliferation of Hindu cow-protection vigilantes. Representatives of the leather and buffalo meat industries — which together account for around $10 billion in yearly exports — warned that the restrictions would lead to a catastrophic drop in supplies, as well as job losses and company closings.

There was also a political cost. The Bharatiya Janata Party, already popular in the so-called cow belt, has been eager to expand its support in the south and northeast, areas where meat is commonly eaten. B.J.P. leaders in two districts in Meghalaya State announced their resignation from the party, saying that eating meat was intrinsic to their culture.

Dr. Vardhan said the regulations had been widely misunderstood, and there had been no intention to discourage the eating or export of meat. “We do not want to either influence or change the food habits of anybody, neither do we want to affect the slaughtering business in this country,” he said, adding, “We will facilitate their growth, instead of hampering it.”

He said feedback had been solicited from representatives of the beef and leather industries early this year. “We never anticipated that people would have some misunderstanding,” he said.

But industry executives said they had been caught entirely by surprise when the new rules were made public on May 23.

“We were not invited — neither we, nor anyone from the leather industry, nor those who take part in the cattle market — for any discussions before the notification was issued,” said Yusuf Qureshi, who heads an organization in Uttar Pradesh of traditional butchering families, many of whom own large plants that package and export flash-frozen buffalo.

“Nobody was informed or invited to sit across the table for any suggestions,” he said.

Mr. Qureshi said Dr. Vardhan’s comments encouraged him. “We want to be invited on board for a road map which lets us function with peace and respectability,” he said.

It was unclear, however, when or how the rules would be amended. Some officials of the governing party continued to rule out any softening.

“There is no question of withdrawing the notification,” Ramesh Chandappa Jigajinagi, the minister of state for drinking water and sanitation, said in an interview. “We Hindus have been worshiping cows for so long and we should do something for them. Those who are objecting within the party are doing it at their individual level.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/15/world/asia/india-meat-restrictions.html?_r=0


NY Times :D :D

These morons predicted landslide win for Killary.
btw, this is the Modi govt that chose to make Yogi as CM of UP, in all reality, the third most powerful person in India.
How many times have these moron seculars said crap about Modi only for him to stand ground and kick them in their nuts. ;)
 
. . .
Either Muslim, Hindu or Christians, all are Indian citizens. Thread must remain clean and none should be insulted on this forum. People feeling as such and that cannot live without the same, must understand that PDF does not allow such insults and provocation as well as religious hatred that every community be respected accordingly. Keep the thread clean and stick to the topic that says Politics.

Any members that insults, report the same without quoting back or responding in kind and move on.

Regards,
 
. . .

Rajasthan Man Lynched for Objecting to Civic Officials Taking Photos of Women Defecating in the Open
By The Wire Staff on 16/06/2017Leave a comment
Share this:
Zafar Khan intervened and tried to stop municipality officials from taking pictures of women defecating in the open, but was kicked, punched and beaten to death by them.

Representational image. Credit: PTI

New Delhi: A 55-year-old man was lynched and killed by municipality employees in Pratapgarh in Rajasthan today when he tried to prevent them from taking photographs of women defecating in the open.

The incident took place early the morning near Bagwasa Kachi basti area when Zafar Khan, a social worker, tried to stop civic officials, who were out to shame the women of the district, from taking photographs and videos. The municipality workers kicked, punched and beat Khan, causing his death, according to the FIR filed by Khan’s elder brother Noor Mohammad.

“When we heard about the attack, we rushed him to the hospital where he was declared brought dead,” Noor, told Hindustan Times.

Noor has lodged a complaint against Kamal Harijan, Ritesh Harijan, Manish Harijan, Nagar Parishad commissioner Ashok Jain and others, after which the police registered a case of murder, the Pratapgarh police said.

Pratapgarh superintendent of police Shivraj Meena said, “We are getting the matter investigated and a case has been registered against the four named accused in the FIR.”

Qayoom, Khan’s nephew, told HT that there were no toilets in the slum where he was killed, and Khan had been demanding for a long time that the district administration build toilets in the area.

Rajasthan chief minister Vasundhara Raje had said that her government was committed to making the state open defecation free by 2017. In a review meeting of the panchayat raj department at the end of last month, officials informed Raje that 58 lakh toilets had been constructed in the state in the last three and a half years under the government’s Swachh Bharat mission, and 4,973 of the state’s 9,891 gram panchayats were declared open defecation free.
 
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