India’s northern Haryana yesterday toughened its ban on slaughtering cows and selling beef, including doubling jail terms to 10 years, becoming the second state to move recently on the religiously sensitive issue.
The Haryana government passed legislation in state parliament banning the sale of beef and beef products and killing cows which are considered sacred in officially secular but Hindu-majority India.
“Cow is our mother and we need to protect her at any cost,” Haryana agriculture and animal husbandry minister O P Dhankar said after the bill was anonymously passed.
“The law has been framed after studying the laws of different states,” he said.
The move by Haryana’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government comes after western Maharashtra state this month introduced a ban so strict that even possession of beef could land one in jail for five years.
The bovine animal’s revered status took on extra significance after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s BJP won a landslide general election last May. The party’s election manifesto pledged to work to protect cows.
Maharashtra, which includes the financial hub Mumbai, is also ruled by the BJP in alliance with the far-right Shiv Sena party.
Although Haryana has long banned killing of cows, the new law hikes prison terms to a maximum 10 years if convicted of the crime and fines of up to 100,000 rupees ($1,600).Similar new penalties apply for selling cows or beef.
Haryana, which borders the capital New Delhi, is also proposing to set up cow sanctuaries or reserves to better protect the animals, thousands of which roam the streets of Indian cities and towns.