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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

No room at the inn for India’s ‘sacred’ cows

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Revered by most Indians, cows are at the centre of political battles and ‘lynch mob’ attacks, but they are being abandoned in growing numbers and turned away by shelters that cannot cope.


The Sri Krishna Gaushala on the outskirts of New Delhi is typical of shelters for homeless cows across India — struggling to keep up with demand.


Authorities in Uttar Pradesh and Haryana states are thinking of building cow shelters in prisons. At one Uttar Pradesh shelter, scores of cows are reported to have died from hunger in recent weeks.


Sri Krishna is spread over 38 acres and is home to nearly 8,000 cows, bulls and calves — mostly ageing, ailing and no longer producing milk.


Rajendra Singh Shekhawat manages 110 bustling sheds where cows are fed, treated and even massaged after being rescued, bought from cash-strapped farmers, or donated.


The shelter is close to its 7,800 capacity. “We have 7,700 right now. All the other cow shelters in Delhi are facing the same problem, they’re all overcrowded,” Shekhawat said. Cows are worshipped as a mother figure by Hindus who make up more than 900 million of the country’s 1.3 billion population.


Some people consider cows a one-stop-shop for their dairy and medical needs. Many believe that drinking cow urine can cure everything from arthritis and asthma to cancer and diabetes.


A 2012 livestock census found there were more than five million strays across India and more than 12,000 in Delhi.


Cows hold up city traffic and graze on plastic bags, used sanitary napkins and corroded batteries on garbage dumps. One had to be rescued in Delhi last week after falling down a rain drain.


Courts have repeatedly ordered authorities to take action because of the safety and public health risk.


But since Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party stormed to power in 2014, cows have won a near-VIP status. Rumours of cows being taken for slaughter can spark murderous reprisals and religious riots.


The government tried to impose a nationwide ban on the sale of cattle for slaughter, triggering an outcry among Muslims and other minorities who eat beef. The ban was suspended by the Supreme Court this month.


Every month, some 600 cattle are rounded up in Delhi and relocated to five shelters.


“Three of the five are packed. Currently we’re deporting strays to the nearest less-crowded shelter,” Jitendra Kumar Gaur, director of Delhi’s animal husbandry department, said.


Every day, the five shelters receive Rs 40 ($0.62) per animal from the government. Shekhawat says he spends more than Rs 100 ($1.55) for each cow.


Supporters of the shelter donate thousands of dollars each year to keep it going. But space is also a problem.


“We have long-term solutions. We won’t let this problem get out of hand,” Shekhawat vowed.


He says the best way to lower the number of strays is for Indians to go back to their rural roots and “take care of cows at home”.


With stray numbers rising, it is tough for Delhi residents to look after a cow in a city where the population is shooting toward 20 million.


And the problem is not limited to Delhi, according to animal rights activist Rima Anand, highlighting shelters bursting at the seams across India.


“There is a change in attitude towards cows thanks to this government. It has prioritised cow welfare,” Anand, of the Delhi-based Dhyan Foundation that rescues and protects animals, said.


“Shelters are full across the country,” said Anand. But this, she maintained, was better than seeing the animals slaughtered illegally.


“Ask me. Overcrowded cow shelters is good news.” — AFP


Annie Banerji


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