Supreme Court to hear PIL against cattle sale regulations

08 Jun 2017 9:42 AM | General
199 Report

The Supreme Court on Wednesday agreed to hear a PIL challenging the May 23 notification by the Centre that banned buying animals from markets for slaughter.

Mohammed Abdul Faheem Qureshi, president of Hyderabad-based All India Jamiatul Quresh Action Committee, through his counsel Sanobar Ali Qureshi, mentioned his PIL before vacation bench of Justices Ashok Bhushan and Deepak Gupta for urgent consideration.

The bench put the matter for hearing on June 15. The PIL contended that the rule unconstitutionally prohibited the sale of cattle for slaughter, imposing an absolute ban on the purchase of the animal, and violated the fundamental rights of freedom of choice of food. 

It pointed out that Karnataka, Kerala, Tripura and West Bengal had already said they would not implement the rules as it would “impact the poor Dalits and Muslims”.

“The complete ban of sale or purchase or resale of animals would cast a huge economic burden on the farmers and cattle traders who find it difficult to feed their children today, but would be required to feed the cattle as it is an offence under the Act of 1960 to starve an animal or failure to maintain it; and would also give way for cow vigilantes to harass farmers and cattle traders under the blessing of the impugned regulations,” the petitioner apprehended.

Edited By

Shruthi G

Reported By

Shruthi G

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