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Nothing's sacred : Illegal trade in India's holy cow

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Nothing's sacred: the illegal trade in India's holy cows
Andrew Buncombe reports from Kaharpara on a bloody war between rustlers and border guards


http://www.independent.co.uk/enviro...llegal-trade-in-indias-holy-cows-7808483.html

ANDREW BUNCOMBE FRIDAY 01 JUNE 2012

Even in the dog days of summer, the quiet paddy fields that mark the border between India and Bangladesh look as supple and green as the soft stems of herbs grown in a window box. But the daytime tranquillity belies a stark reality. This delta region of the Ganges river is a place of often deadly conflict that underpins an activity many in India would rather not discuss. Every year, hundreds of thousands of cows – considered sacred in India, with export of the beasts banned – are illegally smuggled into Bangladesh where they are turned into shoes, belts, bone china crockery and, of course, meat.


"There is smuggling here every day," said Umesh, a member of a three-man Indian Border Security Force (BSF) team on duty at a watchtower near the village of Kaharpara, just a few hundred yards from the Bangladesh border. "The smugglers will take 50, 100 or 200 cattle at a time. We try to create an ambush and surround the smugglers."

The story of the annual smuggling of an estimated 1.5 million cattle says much about modern India – about the sometimes hypocritical treatment of supposedly sacred cows, the political power of right-wing Hinduism and the corruption that allows the £320m illegal trade to flourish. But ultimately this story is about supply and demand. Hindu-majority India has an estimated 280 million cows but killing and eating them is legal in only a handful of states. Meanwhile, Muslim-majority Bangladesh, where beef is eaten with relish, suffers from a shortage of cattle. Half of the beef consumed in Bangladesh comes from its large, western neighbour.

The snaking border that divides the two countries runs for 1,300 miles. Here in the Murshidabad district of West Bengal, 150 miles north-east of the state capital Calcutta, large sections of it are unfenced. It is a lure both for human traffickers and gangs from both sides of the border smuggling cows.

Villagers, who claimed not to know any smugglers but appeared to know the intricacies of the operation, said cattle were brought by truck from states across eastern India such as Bihar, Orissa and Jharkhand. Some may even be brought from further away. Despite the effort involved, the mathematics is persuasive. An animal that might sell for £60-£80 in the country's cow-belt hinterland will here fetch £130. Once inside Bangladesh, they could change hands for £225 or more.

"Those buying the cows always look to see how fat it is. They feed them husks from the paddy," said Mohammed Ashraf, a blacksmith who was hammering into shape a glowing curved sickle that locals use to cut the rice crop that is harvested three times a year.

Yet the trade comes with a deadly price. The BSF has been accused of killing hundreds of cattle smugglers, as well as civilians not involved in the trade. A 2010 report published by Human Rights Watch (HRW) suggested that more than 900 people had been killed with impunity by the BSF over the past 10 years. It also said locals claimed some BSF members were complicit with the smuggling and took bribes. This year, an incident in which an alleged smuggler was badly beaten by the security force personnel was captured on video.

"Over the last decade, they used excessive and indiscriminate force, shooting at villagers on suspicion that they were smugglers," said Meenakshi Ganguly, HRW's south Asia director. "While many may have been engaged in cattle rustling, the BSF ignored the most basic principles of protecting the right to life. Instead of arresting suspects, they shot and killed them. The BSF claimed they had to use lethal force as self-defence, an argument hard to believe since the police reports on the weapons recovered usually [refer to] sickles and sticks."

Asked about the allegations, a BSF spokesman said: "The BSF is a disciplined and professional force [and] exercises utmost restraint in the use of any force. The BSF has also an impeccable record of upholding human rights."

Ms Ganguly said that since issuing its report, the BSF had started using rubber bullets which led to a drop in fatalities. But, villagers said their evenings were still sometimes disrupted. "We hear the gunshots at night-time. Sometimes the smugglers get shot. It's mainly people from the other side of the border," said Mr Ashraf. Locals said the smugglers often used teenagers to transport the cattle across the border in the belief the security forces were less likely to shoot a youngster.

There is a clear antagonism between the guards and the villagers. Some locals said the BSF troops retaliated against anyone they could find. Matir Rahaman, a rice farmer who was cycling back from the fields, said he had been badly beaten by BSF personnel. "One night the cows came over the border and the paddy got smashed. I went to the BSF and said, 'Why is this happening'. They said, 'You are smugglers' and they attacked us with [metal-tipped bamboo sticks]," he alleged.

Ashfaqur Rahman, a retired Bangladesh diplomat who now chairs the Dhaka-based Centre for Foreign Affairs Studies, said the matter was sensitive but that legalising the export of cows or beef would put an end to corruption and violence. "There needs to be wise counsel on both sides," he said.

An irony is that India is expected to become the world's largest exporter of beef – from non-sacred buffaloes, rather than cows – by next year. According to an estimate recently published by the US Department of Agriculture, India is likely to export 1.5 million tons of beef in 2012, a 25 per cent increase from last year. Its biggest markets are south-east Asia, the Gulf and Africa.

Cows have been considered sacred in India for centuries, and in only a few states is killing and eating them legal. More recently, a movement by Dalits, or so-called untouchables, demanding the right to eat cows has gathered pace. In 2004, Indian historian DN Jha published the controversial The Myth of the Holy Cow, which argued that during the period when a number of the most important Hindu religious texts were produced, people in India ate cows.

Kancha Ilaiah, a Dalit activist and a professor at Maulana Azad National Urdu University in Hyderabad, believes Aryan invaders of Hindu promoted the (white) cow over the (black) buffalo. "The buffalo predates the Aryans," he said.


There have been attempts by the Indian authorities to review the ban on cow exports. Earlier this year, a report by the government's central planning committee suggested changing the law to allow the export of beef. The plan was hastily dropped and explained away as a "clerical error" amid an angry backlash from right-wing Hindu organisations such as the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and so-called "cow protection" groups.

Among those who complained was the UN-affiliated International Organisation for Animal Protection. The group's India director, Naresh Kadyan, said: "It is the fundamental duty of Indians that [everyone] should respect all animals. We strongly opposed the lifting of the ban and the government made a U-turn," he said. "The cow is a very important animal for Hindus."

Revered and worshipped: Saintly beasts

Elephants

In Thailand, the elephant is considered the national animal, and it is also revered in Burma, Cambodia and Laos.

Particularly auspicious is the white elephant – not a distinct species but an albino or elephant with particularly pale skin – which Buddha's mother is said to have dreamt about before the birth of her son. The appearance of a white elephant in the reign of a monarch or leader is meant to signify good fortune and power.

Cats

The ancient Egyptians took their worship of animals to artistic heights with statues to honour their feline gods, which frequently featured cats' heads on human bodies.

Cats were prized for their useful rat-catching abilities, and some argue they were first domesticated in the region.

While cats are no longer worshipped as gods in modern Egypt, they are certainly preferred as pets to dogs, which are traditionally considered unclean in Islam.

Monkeys

Their association with the Hindu faith – the monkey god, Hanuman, helped Lord Rama defeat the evil king Ravana – has largely protected India's monkeys in the face of much annoyance at their mischievous and sometimes aggressive ways.

Delhi's tens of thousands of monkeys are a frequent nuisance, stealing food, breaking into homes, and even attacking people. But residents continue to feed them.

 
This is quite interesting when this article talked about 1.5 million angelic cows from India flies to Bangladesh and even talked about villagers knowledge of the event but did not utter a single word the BSF's involvement in these incidents to let these cow go by taking bribe. When no money they get then shoot one or two random unarmed Bangladesh. shame on India.
 
I came to know that from a video you posted earlier that GOI can't legalize the cow trade because they don't want to piss off the Hindu population of India and GOI also don't want to stop this cow trade because Indian population of border regions are solely dependent on this illegal cow trade.If India stop this trade then there is high possibility of this poor people may become handy for Maoists.So the GOI is not shooting people for so called illegal trespassing rather it is the BSF who shoots the cow traders only if they don't get enough bribes.This simple thing won't get through Indian brains as their brains are full of suppa pawa ego $hit !!
 
.This simple thing won't get through Indian brains as their brains are full of suppa pawa ego $hit !!

Dude you suffer from serious inferiority complex viz-a-viz india. Nobody is talking about any geopolitical ambition of any country, yet you were too tempted to drag india's ambition into this totally unrelated topic. At least we have an ambition to achieve and we are working hard to achieve it, what hope do you got, turning into something like your previous western masters??
 
Dude you suffer from serious inferiority complex viz-a-viz india. Nobody is talking about any geopolitical ambition of any country, yet you were too tempted to drag india's ambition into this totally unrelated topic. At least we have an ambition to achieve and we are working hard to achieve it, what hope do you got, turning into something like your previous western masters??
Where did you see inferiority complex,i was talking about the facts which can be easily seen in the posts by Indian members.
Btw nobody were our master nor subject,Alexandar didn't dare to put a fight with us even when he conquered from Greece to the banks of Ganges.
Akbar couldn't get a hold on to this land until he made a peace treaty with the Baro Bhuiyans.
British rulers wouldn't even get their feet a single inch inside of this land if there were no Mir Jafar as Shirajudduolla had far more fire power than the British.
Pakistan only managed to rule over us because our Muslim population had faith on them as Muslim brothers but they back stabbed us by killing innocents which eventually put an end to that faith and turned the whole nation against them.May be it'd take 9 years instead of 9 months without Indian help but the result was inevitable.
 
Poor Indian farmers are committing suicide suffering form hunger. This rate will even increase if illegal cow trafficking is stopped. And the Indian aspiration for Super Power reminds me about a Bengali proverb “ছাল নেই কুত্তা, বাঘা তার নাম”.
 
Poor Indian farmers are committing suicide suffering form hunger. This rate will even increase if illegal cow trafficking is stopped. And the Indian aspiration for Super Power reminds me about a Bengali proverb “ছাল নেই কুত্তা, বাঘা তার নাম”.
Wow!!! congrats man!!! you have just determined the fate and the future of the country based on one illegal activity in one region of the country!!!
You have just contradicted a dozen of world's best economists!!
 
I don't understand why Muslims are so desperate meat has it been written in Quran that they would attain salvation through beef.

BSF are just doing what they are supposed to do. Protecting the country and protecting the faith of the country.
 
Now i know why they cry a river for dead pole vaulters ... Every other piece of their beef comes from them ...
 
Eating meat is every Human's rights...

"We didn't come up to the top of the food chain to become a vegetarian."
 
To meet their economic growth targets indians are now smuggling their GAO MATA to slaughtered by muslims? Start slaughtering them in india and we will recognize that india is moving in right direction towards secularism.

Send them our way, we will pay higher for your GAO MATA.
 
To meet their economic growth targets indians are now smuggling their GAO MATA to slaughtered by muslims? Start slaughtering them in india and we will recognize that india is moving in right direction towards secularism.

Send them our way, we will pay higher for your GAO MATA.

Muslims own all the butchery shops in India, especially of Beef and mutton, so being secular we cannot interfere with their faith.
 
To meet their economic growth targets indians are now smuggling their GAO MATA to slaughtered by muslims? Start slaughtering them in india and we will recognize that india is moving in right direction towards secularism.

Send them our way, we will pay higher for your GAO MATA.

ya, its because of the cash that you give for our cows the INDIAN economy is up, :sick: what an idiot.
we are just sending the sick cows for you to eat and on the contrary you give away your women as blood deed, etc to your victims.
 
India can not feed her impoverished border citizens without this illegal beef trade and their wholesale illegal cattle traders
are increasing their standard of living via this lucrative cattle trade, contributing to the indian economy. Foolish indians sitting
in their air conditioned rooms don't understand the plight of their poor countrymen. As aspected from Barmin racist. We
Bangladeshis are doing India's poor a favor and bringing millions of indians out of poverty by importing 1.5 million cattles a year.
Legalise this trade and India will be the main beneficiary.:)
 
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