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Bribes and a blind eye dot every step of the cattle trail
For a cattle transporter, every bit of utilised space in the truck translates into a bigger profit
Rachel Lopez
W HETHER YOU buy your beef from the local butcher's or order it off an engraved menu in a fancy restaurant, most of Mumbai's beef comes from the city's only legal slaughterhouse at Deonar, run by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC).
Mumbai's demand for beef is high; more than 60 per cent of the 7,67,878 bullocks and buffalos slaughtered in Maharashtra in 2005 were for Mumbai consumption. To meet this requirement, animals are brought in from Vidharba, Satara and Malegaon, and sometimes eves as far away as Gujarat and Rajasthan, where the slaughter of cows, bullocks and buffaloes is banned. "The meat industry finds it cheaper to transport live animals than to slaughter them elsewhere and transport the meat to Mumbai, because they will then have to invest in infrastructure like cold storage," explains NG Jayasimha, Campaigns and Legal Affairs coordinator for Peta.
The Central government stipulates that all cattle sold for slaughter must have a doctor's certificate stating the animal is unproductive. This means it is either too old to till fields or past its ability to provide milk. But at cattle fairs across Maharashtra and neighbouring states, "a bribe of as little as Rs 100 per animal can ensure that any animal, even a six-monthold calf, is declared unproductive," says Bhavin Gathani of the animal welfare organisation Karuna Parivaar.
Once sold, the animals are loaded into a Mumbai-bound truck. For the transporter, every bit of utilised space translates into a bigger profit, so animals are often tied, maimed, blinded, whipped into submission and cramped into a truck (see box).
On the way to Mumbai are check posts manned by Forest Department officials, commercial tax officials, sales tax and road transport officials, all of whom are required to inspect the number of animals being transported, the necessary health certificates and vehicle suitability. "But for Rs 400, officers look the other way and attest that your cargo has met requirements," says Gathani.
At Deonar, wholesale buyers selects the animals to be slaughtered and determine the price. All that remains now is for the BMC-appointed veterinarian to perform an antemortem and certify that the animal about to be slaughtered is free from disease.
"The vets at Deonar never even see these animals," alleges advocate Joshi, a member of the 'Committee to monitor Animal Welfare laws in India'. "They take Rs 100 for every animal you want and sit in their offices all day, stamping away approvals for slaughter." At Malad's Ahimsa hospital, which takes care of animals rescued en route to the slaughterhouse, Dr Kamlakar Patil lists the diseases that he has typically seen in rescued animals-maggot-infested wounds foot and mouth disease, anthrax, and cancer. He adds that the animals suffer such "acute starvation, dehydration and trauma" during their journey that even after medical attention, more than 25 per cent of them succumb to their diseases.
URL : http://epaper.hindustantimes.com/artMailDisp.aspx?article=29_10_2006_008_002&typ=0&pub=264
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