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MAY
29, 2000 VOL. 156 NO. 21
Is
Nothing Sacred?
International
animal-rights activists accuse India of showing uncharacteristic cruelty
toward its cows
By MASEEH RAHMAN New Delhi
Mahatma Gandhi believed that a nation could be judged by the way it treats
its animals. If that yardstick were applied to his own country today,
India would be in the doghouse. Hindus venerate many of God's creatures,
and the cow is considered especially sacred. But the international animal-rights
group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) has exposed horrendous
cruelty to India's cows as they are transported, illegally, to slaughter
houses. Many arrive dead or badly injured after long and torturous journeys
in trains and trucks or on foot. "It is Dante's Inferno for cows and bullocks,"
says PETA president Ingrid Newkirk.
India's livestock population, estimated at more than 500 million, is the
world's largest. More than half are cows, buffalo and bulls. Once they
become unproductive, many of the animals are sold by their owners, mostly
subsistence farmers, and marched off to slaughter houses. Cow slaughter
is permitted in just two provinces, the communist-ruled states of West
Bengal in the east and Kerala in the south. Although it is illegal to
transport the animals for slaughter across state borders, traders bribe
officials to look the other way as they pack the cows into rail cars or
trucks headed for West Bengal or Kerala. The animals frequently gore one
another or break their pelvises when forced to jump from the trucks. Some
suffocate inside boxcars. Thousands of others are surreptitiously herded
overland--often without food or water. If they collapse from exhaustion,
herders break their tails or throw chili pepper and tobacco in their eyes
to make them walk again.
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ALSO IN TIME
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COVER: Nice Guys Finish Last
A backslapping
former movie actor with a penchant for telling off-color jokes,
President Joseph Estrada seems ill-equipped to solve his country's
many problems
Hostage Drama: In
search of a breakthrough
JAPAN: Dirty Little Secret
As deadly toxins contaminate the environment, the nation's leaders
simply look the other way
The Activist: One
man's clean-up crusade
Viewpoint: A plea
to take action before it's too late
AFGHANISTAN:
Religion in Command
The Taliban have ignored the intricacies of governing, leaving the
impoverished nation in crisis
Herat: The country's
golden goose has its own rules
Women: Opportunities
are still dismal
Education:
Home-based schools for girls quietly flourish
MALAYSIA:
Pirate Trade
Authorities struggle to stop booming exports of digital counterfeits
INDIA:
Holy Cow!
Animal-rights activists expose the barbaric transport and slaughter
of the country's most revered beasts
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The
campaign against the practice is attracting support from a number of animal-activist
celebrities. Paul McCartney, Brigitte Bardot, Steven Seagal and Nina Hagen
took part in an international day of protest two weeks ago in their home
countries. "My heart breaks for the misery endured by all the mother cows
and their calves ... who have become throw-aways in today's India," McCartney
declared. The $1.6 billion Indian leather export industry is feeling the
pinch. Gap and its subsidiaries Banana Republic and Old Navy have banned
the use of Indian leather in their garments. The British shoe company
Clark's announced last week that it will review the purchase of products
made from Indian leather. PETA's hit list also includes Florsheim, Nordstrom,
Casual Corner and other retail chains. "It's a wake-up call to India's
leather industry," says PETA's Indian campaign coordinator Jason Baker.
"If it doesn't do something soon to stop the cruelty against cows, there
will be no leather industry left."
India's leather barons are worried that the protests will cripple exports
to the West. Nearly 4,000 tanneries and leather-goods factories depend
on the export trade. The industry employs around 1.7 million people, nearly
a third of whom are women. "The campaign is going to affect us, no doubt
about it," says Mohammed Hashim, chairman of the Council for Leather Exports.
He feels his tribe is unfairly targeted. "We're only scavengers," he says.
"We take skins sold by slaughter houses." Moreover, he adds, 90% of the
hides council members use are from buffalo, goats or sheep. His organization
has appealed to exporters to use only leather from animals that have been
killed humanely.
The government, though, shows no sign of moving against the illegal transport
and slaughter. Before PETA's campaign, Indian animal-rights groups had
been trying for years to stop the brutal cattle trail. It's a multimillion-dollar
business, and the kickbacks to politicians and officials are thought to
be huge. (The cow "death trains" are operated by the state-owned railway.)
Banning cow slaughter in West Bengal and Kerala probably wouldn't help,
as it would surely lead to an increase in the number of illegal, backstreet
slaughter houses. New Delhi may simply find it easier to respond to other
demands by animal lovers, like creating a national authority for protecting
cows or introducing tougher penalties for cruelty to animals (under existing
law, the fine is only about $1).
A simpler solution would be to lift the ban on cow slaughter throughout
India, to deter the deadly, illegal herdings across state lines. "Villagers
can't afford to keep unproductive cows. They're not saints," says Bangalore
animal-welfare worker Suparna Baksi-Ganguly. "Slaughter has to be made
more accessible--suppressing it causes greater misery to the animals."
But such a step would provoke the ire of cow lovers, and no political
party is likely to risk that. So in a land that venerates them, cows will
continue to pay a high price for their holiness.
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