Agriculture

Centre to roll back controversial ban on trade of cattle for slaughter

The government’s May 23 notification on changes made to the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (Regulation of Livestock Market) Rules, 2017, sparked protests in many parts of the country

 
By DTE Staff
Published: Thursday 30 November 2017
Credit: Vikas Choudhary__

The Union Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CC) has sought advice from the Union Ministry of Law as it moves to amend its May notification regulating cattle trade.

C K Mishra, Secretary, MoEF&CC said, “We have sent the file to the law ministry. We are some distance away from a decision.”

The MoEF&CC’s May 23 notification on changes made to the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (Regulation of Livestock Market) Rules, 2017, sparked protests in many parts of the country, notably in Kerala, West Bengal and Meghalaya where cow slaughter is permitted. While welfare of animals is a union ministry subject, regulation of cattle trade falls within the purview of the state government.

The Madras High Court had granted an interim stay on the implementation of the rules, which was later extended to the entire country in July by the Supreme Court.

The rules, that apply to trade in cows, buffaloes, bulls, bullocks, heifers, calves and camels, were apparently aimed at regulating cattle markets so that cattle are traded only for agricultural purposes and not for slaughter. Cattle sellers have to produce a written declaration that the animal was not being sold for slaughter, under the rules.

The notification also limited the trade to farm owners, a move that would have hit poor landless farmers, and restricted supplies to India’s Rs. 1 lakh-crore meat industry.

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India is the largest exporter of beef, most of which is buffalo, not cow meat.

Union Environment Minister Harsh Vardhan, who took over the ministry in May, indicated in September that revisions would be made. “The aim of the rules was to prevent cruelty to the animals. It has nothing to do with the slaughter business, it has nothing to do with changing your food habits,” he had said in June.

The amendments will have to be approved by the Animal Welfare Board of India. The Board’s next meeting will be only in January. 

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