Cow protection across India
Over 99% of India’s population lives in areas under cow protection laws, highlights Alison Saldanha.
BY IndiaSpend14 April 2017 4:54 PM GMT
IndiaSpend14 April 2017 4:54 PM GMT
On March 31, 2017, the Gujarat state Assembly amended the state's cow protection laws to extend the maximum sentence for cow slaughter from seven years to a life term and a fine of up to Rs 5 lakh. The amendment made offences under the Gujarat Animal Preservation Act of 1954, which criminalises cow slaughter as well as transportation of cows for slaughter and possession of beef, non-bailable.
After these amendments, Gujarat holds the mantle of the state with the strictest laws in the country to protect cows, bullocks, bulls, and their progeny.
In an analysis of cow protection laws across the country, IndiaSpend found that:
As of March 2017, cow slaughter has been prohibited in 84 per cent of India's states and Union Territories (UTs), which account for 99.38 per cent of the country's population.
Laws banning cow slaughter in nearly half of these states are roughly 50 years old, enacted during the tenure of the Indian National Congress. The oldest bans on cow slaughter have been in place in Jammu & Kashmir (J&K) and Manipur, promulgated by their former rulers in 1932 and 1936, respectively, prior to Indian Independence and the annexation of states.
After the Congress split in 1969, over 80 per cent of the states that enacted new laws prohibiting cow slaughter did so under a Janata Party or a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government. Cow protection laws enacted or amended over the last 23 years in 10 of 11 states are especially more stringent.
In 77 per cent or 24 states and UTs that prohibit cow slaughter, the offence is cognizable, and in more than half of these (13), it is non-bailable. Under India's criminal procedure code, cognizable offences are serious crimes such as murder, rape, dowry deaths, and kidnapping. In such cases, the police can make an arrest without a warrant and start investigation without a magistrate's permission.
Cow protection has a long history in Indian politics, dating back to pre-Independence times when it found support from mass organisations such as the Arya Samaj and a personage of no less than Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi.
1950-1968: Post-Independence and after India became a republic in 1950, cow protection enthusiasts were reigned in and a ban on cow slaughter was only included as a Directive Principle of State Policy, and not as a fundamental right as its supporters had demanded. Nevertheless, Congress governments enacted laws prohibiting cow slaughter in 15 states and UTs, until just before the 1969 Congress party split. The offence was made punishable with a prison term ranging from six months to two years. Madhya Pradesh, with a prison term of three years and a fine of Rs 5,000, had the strictest law of its time, after J&K.
1977-1979: After a gap of eight years, the enactment of cow protection laws saw a resurgence when the Janata Party, with its Hindu nationalist elements from the Bharatiya Jana Sangh (which later formed the BJP), came to power in 1977 and served a two-year tenure at the country's helm. Laws came into force in the UTs of Goa and Daman & Diu and the state of Himachal Pradesh under a Janata Party government and Andhra Pradesh under Congress rule. Maharashtra, also under a Congress government, strengthened its cow protection law, replacing the Bombay Animal Preservation Act 1954 in force till then.
1994 to present: Coinciding with a spike in communal conflict across the country in the early 1990s, the promulgation of cow protection laws restarted in 1994, with the introduction of the Delhi Agricultural Cattle Preservation Act. The law made cow slaughter punishable with a five-year prison term and a fine of Rs 10,000–the strictest of its time after J&K. Since then, cow protection laws have been enacted and amended in 11 states and UTs, prescribing stricter punishment in 10 of these barring Sikkim (where restrictions and punishment are among the mildest). Nine of these states were ruled by the BJP at the time of enactment or amendment. In 12 states, cow slaughter can lead to a prison term ranging from two to 14 years. Prior to Gujarat's recent amendment, the Muslim-dominated state of J&K had the most stringent punishment for cow slaughter. The law was instituted in 1932 under the Ranbir Penal Code, the code introduced during the reign of the Dogra ruler Ranbir Singh, which still applies in J&K.
This law makes cow slaughter a cognizable and non-bailable offence punishable with up to 10 years' imprisonment and a penalty of up to five times the value of the bovine killed. Cows are estimated to cost lakhs in J&K. In terms of severity of punishment, Haryana comes in third. Enacted in 2015, the Haryana Gauvansh Sanrakshan and Gausamvardhan Act deems cow slaughter a cognisable, non-bailable offence inviting a maximum punishment of 10 years' rigorous imprisonment and a maximum fine of Rs 1 lakh.
In Jharkhand and Uttarakhand too, cow slaughter is punishable with a maximum sentence of 10 years' rigorous imprisonment, but a lower fine of Rs 10,000. In contrast, restrictions on cow slaughter in Kerala and Sikkim are the mildest.
In Kerala, cow slaughter is prohibited in rural areas under the Kerala Panchayat (Slaughter Houses and Meat Stalls) Rules, 1964, and in urban areas as per a 1976 government order, but is allowed if the bovine is over 10 years of age. Offenders are fined Rs 1,000. Similarly, the 2008 Sikkim Police Act prohibits cow slaughter only in public spaces and provides for a monetary penalty only for unsanitary slaughter. The four states of Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Mizoram, and Nagaland and the UT of Lakshadweep have no laws related to cow slaughter, according to this document from the central Department of Animal Husbandry, Dairying and Fisheries. The document notes that DAHD receives numerous representations for banning cow slaughter across the country and declaring the cow as India's national animal. While cow slaughter is banned in the Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Tripura, as mentioned in the DAHD document, there is limited information publicly available about their laws.
The law in Manipur is based on a 1936 darbar resolution proclaimed during the reign of Maharaja Churachand Singh, whose contours are therefore vague–it does not specify, for instance, if cow slaughter is a cognizable and non-bailable offence.
(In an arrangement with IndiaSpend.org, with whom Alison Saldanha is Assistant Editor. The views are of IndiaSpend.)
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