Didn't understand your question. There are few lynchings, leave alone lynchings of beef eaters. The Mohammed Akhlaq incident took place in UP. Cow-transporters were assaulted. Nobody was affected in the 'red' areas, the largely meat-eating areas.
One way to look at that map is to think of Indian food habits as being distributed in concentric circles.
The smallest, narrowest circle is concentrated on Gujarat; that has the highest proportion of vegetarians. As the circles increase in size, the percentage of meat-eaters increases: Rajasthan and Maharashtra have more meat-eaters than Gujarat, UP, MP, Telengana have more meat-eaters than Rajasthan and Maharasthra, and so on and so forth.
Finally in Nagaland and in most of the north-east, the meat-eating is maximised. It's already pretty strong in Bengal and in Tamil Nadu. Hugely strong in Kerala.