Skip to main content

Ban hits wild cats too(hindu)

As the beef traders’ strike continues, lions, tigers and other carnivores in Mumbai zoos now get chicken as their primary feed. Keepers worry about the animals losing strength

Palash, the largest tiger at the Sanjay Gandhi National Park in Mumbai, still paces his cage for the hour
leading up to dinner and still pounces on his meal when his handlers lift the gate to his feeding room. But lately what the 440-pound feline finds is not his usual 15 pounds of raw beef, fresh from the slaughter. Instead, he and the park’s eight other Bengal tigers, three lions, 14 leopards and three vultures are subsisting almost exclusively on decidedly lighter fare: chicken.
The change in diet has nothing to do with health, and everything to do with India’s particular mix of politics and religion.
The Maharashtra State Government, led by the country’s governing Hindu nationalist party, recently banned the possession and sale of beef, imposing religious dietary restrictions on Hindus and non-Hindus alike. Violators can be punished by up to five years in prison.
The law has been sought by Hindu right-wingers, who helped bring Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party come to power last year. Their ability to get the ban passed is seen by many as a sign of their growing power in the BJP-led governments in important States.
Fear of losing business

The new rules caused grumbling from Mumbai’s cosmopolitan, sometimes beef-eating, elite — a group that includes some Hindus who were sore over the sudden disappearance of steaks in restaurants. Others were unsettled by the rising culture wars between the Hindu right and those who oppose its agenda, including minorities. In this case, that group includes the State’s mostly Muslim cattle traders and meat retailers, who fear the ban will damage their businesses.
The beef traders are now weeks into a strike over the ban, refusing to supply shops with even buffalo meat, which is still legal.
And that is where the animals at the national park come in.
Until recently, the animals at the park had feasted on a mixed diet of fresh beef, water buffalo, and chicken. But the ban pulled beef from the menu, and the strike, at least for now, has put fresh buffalo out of reach for these wild cats.
The animal handlers, who seem baffled by the attention in the Indian news media since the ban, give mixed reviews on the switch to white meat. Babu Vishnukote, one of the feeders at the zoo, says the animals are devouring the chicken, which he sees as a good sign. But Shailesh Bhagwan Deore, who oversees the care of the animals kept in captivity at the park, fears the leaner diet might eventually deplete the animals’ strength. In fresh beef, the animals get the taste of blood, Mr. Deore said. They enjoy that.
Growing power of the right?

The fight, of course, is not over what the park’s animals are eating; they will be able to tear into freshly slaughtered buffalo meat as soon as the striking traders begin supplying it again. Underlying the debate is unease among some liberal Indians who are worried that the ban shows the growing power of the Hindu right in the country. Neerja Chowdhury, a journalist and political analyst, said the passage of the ban seemed to indicate a kind of quid pro quo between Mr. Modi and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, or RSS, a Hindu nationalist organisation that backed his recent attempts at land reform despite its reservations over them.
Mr. Modi is walking a tightrope because he himself is trying to come across as somebody who is pursuing inclusive politics, Ms. Chowdhury added. The general is taking one view, but the foot soldiers are taking a different view.
The protection of cows is a volatile subject in India, where the animals are revered by the majority-Hindu population. In a recent interview, activist Noorjehan Safia Niaz railed against the law, which she says unfairly affects poorer members of the country’s Christian, Muslim and Dalit communities who are reliant on beef because it is generally cheaper than chicken (and mutton). The decision to ban beef is a communal one targeted at the marginalised Muslims and Dalits, said Ms. Niaz, adding that the decision was tantamount to the government entering our kitchens and asking us what to eat. It is an extremely personal attack, she said.
It is the members of the Qureshi community, traditional butchers, who have been severely hit by the ban. Others affected even more in the short-run are the workers engaged with the beef business. These workers, labourers and assistants work on a hand-to-mouth basis, earning Rs. 350-400 per day. — © New York Times News Service

Popular posts from this blog

NGT terminates chairmen of pollution control boards in 10 states (downtoearth,)

Cracking the whip on 10 State Pollution Control Boards (SPCBs) for ad-hoc appointments, the National Green Tribunal has ordered the termination of Chairpersons of these regulatory authorities. The concerned states are Himachal Pradesh, Sikkim, Tamil Nadu, Uttarakhand, Kerala, Rajasthan, Telangana, Haryana, Maharashtra and Manipur. The order was given last week by the principal bench of the NGT, chaired by Justice Swatanter Kumar. The recent order of June 8, 2017, comes as a follow-up to an NGT judgment given in August 2016. In that judgment, the NGT had issued directions on appointments of Chairmen and Member Secretaries of the SPCBs, emphasising on crucial roles they have in pollution control and abatement. It then specified required qualifications as well as tenure of the authorities. States were required to act on the orders within three months and frame Rules for appointment [See Box: Highlights of the NGT judgment of 2016 on criteria for SPCB chairperson appointment]. Having ...

High dose of Vitamin C and B3 can kill colon cancer cells: study (downtoearth)

In a first, a team of researchers has found that high doses of Vitamin C and niacin or Vitamin B3 can kill cancer stem cells. A study published in Cell Biology International showed the opposing effects of low and high dose of vitamin C and vitamin B3 on colon cancer stem cells. Led by Bipasha Bose and Sudheer Shenoy, the team found that while low doses (5-25 micromolar) of Vitamin C and B3 proliferate colon cancer stem cells, high doses (100 to 1,000 micromolar) killed cancer stem cells. Such high doses of vitamins can only be achieved through intravenous injections in colon cancer patients. The third leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide, colon cancer can be prevented by an intake of dietary fibre and lifestyle changes. While the next step of the researchers is to delineate the mechanisms involved in such opposing effects, they also hope to establish a therapeutic dose of Vitamin C and B3 for colon cancer stem cell therapy. “If the therapeutic dose gets validated under in vivo...

SC asks Centre to strike a balance on Rohingya issue (.hindu)

Supreme Court orally indicates that the government should not deport Rohingya “now” as the Centre prevails over it to not record any such views in its formal order, citing “international ramifications”. The Supreme Court on Friday came close to ordering the government not to deport the Rohingya. It finally settled on merely observing that a balance should be struck between humanitarian concern for the community and the country's national security and economic interests. The court was hearing a bunch of petitions, one filed by persons within the Rohingya community, against a proposed move to deport over 40,000 Rohingya refugees. A three-judge Bench, led by Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra, began by orally indicating that the government should not deport Rohingya “now”, but the government prevailed on the court to not pass any formal order, citing “international ramifications”. With this, the status quo continues even though the court gave the community liberty to approach i...