Cow protection gangs and violence in India
India's so-called "cow protection gangs" display antithetical qualities to the ones they attribute to their sacred animal - they are unholy, ungentle, frenzied and violent.
India's so-called "cow protection gangs" display antithetical qualities to the ones they attribute to their sacred animal - they are unholy, ungentle, frenzied and violent.
According
to data analytics site India Spend, 45 people were killed in 120
cases of cow-related violence reported across India between 2012 and 2018. The
highest number of violent incidents were recorded in the state of Utter
Pradesh, with 19 verified incidents of cow-related violence resulting in 11
deaths.
On
December 3, the killing of police officer Subodh Kumar singh was
added to this worrying statistic. Inspector Singh was killed alongside a
20-year-old man when a violent mob clashed with police in Uttar Pradesh's
Bulandshahr district. The attackers, many of them members of far-right
Hindu groups, were protesting the alleged inability of the police in
the village of Chingrawathi to stop cow slaughtering, claiming that
animal carcasses - including those of cows - were found in the area.
When rumours about the slaughter of the sacred symbol of
Hindu nationalism arise, it appears, even an officer of the law is not safe.
Incidentally,
Singh was part of the team that investigated the 2015 lynching of Mohammad
Akhlaq, a 52-year-old resident of Bisara village, over allegations of cow
slaughter and beef consumption in a district neighbouring Bulandshahr. Saroj
Singh Chauhan, sister of the slain officer, believes her brother fell victim to
"a conspiracy by the state police" because he "was investigating
the Akhlaq case". She questioned why her brother was left alone in his
vehicle in the middle of a violent mob and said the police, who she accuses of
collaborating with cow protection gangs, are complicit in the incident.
Her allegation daringly suggests that law enforcement in
Utter Pradesh is taking on a political role when it comes to cow protection and
helping the expansion of majoritarian politics.
Abhishek Singh, the younger son of the deceased police
officer, toldreporters, "My father wanted me to be a good
citizen who doesn't incite violence in society in the name of religion."
The good citizen in India currently seems to be under severe stress, facing
fatal consequences for obstructing the tide of right-wing vandalism.
The reversal of justice
A day after the incident in Bulandshahr, Chief Minister of
Uttar Pradesh Yogi Adityanath called a meeting in the state capital, Lucknow.
An investigation into allegations of cow slaughter and "illegal
slaughterhouses" was ordered by Adityanath, but local reports said he did
not address Singh's killing in the Lucknow meeting.
A day
later, Utter Pradesh Director General of Police Om Prakash Singh described the
Bulandshahr incident as "part of a larger conspiracy". His
concerns, just like the chief minister's, centred solely around cow slaughter
and he told reporters that the police would be conducting "a reverse
investigation" - an investigation that would focus on how and why animal
carcasses ended up in the area rather than the two murders.
This reverse order of concern by the police and political
leadership raised a legitimate fear that the so-called "reverse
investigation" is going to lead to a reversal of justice.
Just days
after the December 3 attack, four Muslim men were arrested in
connection with the Bulandshahr case in villages dozens of kilometres
away from the place where the animal carcasses were found. They
were released after being found innocent. There is however, encouraging
news. Bajrang Dal leader
Yogesh Raj, who was the main accused in the mob violence and was absconding
since, has been arrested on January 3. Raj has reportedly confessed
to his role in the violence. It was based on Raj's complaint that the police
had earlier arrested the four Muslims. The question lingers, why is guilt
attributed more readily to people of the minority community.
'The complete collapse of constitutional values'
The fear
that the murderers of officer Singh may never be brought to justice led 82
former bureaucrats, including a former national security adviser, to write a
fiercely worded open letter demanding Adityanath's resignation.
The signatories call the Bulandshahr incident "a
frightening indicator of the complete collapse of constitutional values".
They claim this collapse is epitomised by Adiyanath, who wears his
"bigotry as his badge of identity" and protects perpetrators as
"defenders of faith and culture". The signatories claim that the
chief minister's actions promote "the rule of lawlessness".
There seems to be a political attempt under way to reorder
social spaces in India according to majoritarian diktats. The secular framework
of law is being compromised to favour Hindu religious outfits who are using
lawless means of violence to intimidate and punish minorities.
signatories
of the letter see in the murder of the police officer a calculated attempt by
the state administration to "teach a lesson" to those who are
nonpartisan in cases that involve minorities.
This is a serious indication of the growing order of lawlessness:
a member of the state police paid the price for defending the law against the
"moral police" hell-bent on spreading social disorder and indulging
in violence. The image of Singh's burned-out jeep is a stark exemplar of the
lawlessness overtaking the law.
The ex-bureaucrats view the Bulandshahr mayhem as a
deliberate ploy to further subordinate Muslims and make them "live in
fear". This need is so
overwhelming that even if Muslims in the country stop dealing in cows, the
right-wing vigilante will invent other methods, like the allegations of
so-called “love jihad”, to harm them. There is a concerted move to turn
Muslims into political and social outcasts in India by coercion and
segregation.
So far, more than half the victims of lynchings over
alleged cow slaughter have been Muslims. Hindutva groups use the cow as a tool
to demarcate territories of fear and intimidation. The politics of communalism
never hesitates to put symbols it holds sacred to utilitarian use. In any
supremacist project, majoritarian pride is incomplete without its obverse (and
perverse) side: prejudice and paranoia against minorities. The diktat is clear -
minorities have to lose their identity or perish.
Hindu nationalism seeks to make the minority feel minor.
Hindutva's cunning rhetoric pits a rigid idea of national unity against
disunity, rather than accept legitimate (and competing) political and cultural
difference.
India's founders stood up to majoritarian pressure
In his recently published book, A People's Constitution:
The Everyday Life of Law in the Indian Republic, Rohit De offers a fascinating
account of the vexed history of cow protection laws in post-colonial India.
Public debates, sporadic violence and mass mobilisations on
the cow slaughter issue have been ongoing in India since the late 19th century.
During partition, De mentions, Gandhi made the secular argument that
"Hindu law cannot be imposed on non-Hindus". The Drafting Committee
of the Indian Constitution, in the spirit of defining India as a secular
republic, kept the question of cow protection out of its original draft.
BR Ambedkar, the chairman of the Drafting Committee, pushed
the amendment on cow protection to Directive Principles, skirting the cow
protection lobby's demand to include it as a Fundamental Right. India's first
prime minister after independence, Jawaharlal Nehru, who shared Ambedkar's
modernist indifference to the issue, tried to defuse the problem of cow
slaughter by referring it to state legislatures, which brought it under the
purview of "statutory law".
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Hindu cow protectionists' arguments, explains De, were
based on "cultural homogeneity and majoritarianism". The Qureshis,
a marginalised butcher community, on the contrary, challenged the
Prevention of Cow Slaughter Act in the states of Utter Pradesh and Bihar in
early 1956, on grounds of economics and livelihood.
In 1961, the Allahabad High Court, while drawing up the
principles for punitive action in cow slaughter cases, did not deem the
religious sentiments of the majority community relevant "unless there was
a deliberate attempt to inflame communal passions".
These instances reveal that the founding thinkers of the
Indian democracy, despite facing an emotive issue like cow slaughter, did not
allow their sensibilities to buckle under majoritarian pressure. The secular
law of the state was deemed higher than communal sentiments.
A threat to constitutional morality
Currently, 24 states in India have various regulations
prohibiting either the slaughter or sale of cows. The idea of an existing
prohibition is being used in Utter Pradesh by Hindu cow vigilante groups to
spread lawlessness and inflame communal passions within their own community.
If the Utter Pradesh state administration does not act
against this vandalism, constitutional morality will suffer.
"Constitutional morality", Ambedkar said in his 1949 Constituent
Assembly Speech, "is not a natural sentiment. It has to be
cultivated."
Communalism is not a natural sentiment either. It is
aroused by political design, to undermine the spirit of secular law. India
needs a strong culture of resistance against communal passions that prevent
people from cultivating their constitutional morality.
The Bulandshahr case will have lasting effects on the sense
of political security among local communities. Sarfuddin,
a 38-year-old shop owner who was arrested kilometres away
from Chingrawathi village and wrongly accused of cow slaughter, has
just been released along with three other Muslim men. He is worried the people
in his village will now see him as a criminal. "How will I live with this
charge on my name?" he told local media.
Sarfuddin is also worried about holding on to his
reputation as a good citizen. An administration that is incapable of upholding
constitutional morality would do well to at least not charge good citizens
wrongfully.

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