Mrityunjay Bose MUMBAI: March 21, 2015, DHNS:
Zoos and parks in Maharashtra have started the
odd practice of feeding chicken meat to their captive big cats instead
of beef owing to the new ban on slaughter of bull and bullock in the
state.
Though the ban does not prevent slaughter of water buffaloes, beef traders have refused to sell it in protest.
The
Sanjay Gandhi National Park, which used to procure 150 kg of beef daily
from the Deonar abattoir to meet its requirements, unsuccessfully tried
using goat meat as feed for lions and tigers.
“We are giving
chicken to them, but they are not relishing it. They are not touching
goat meat as they are used to beef. We are not even getting the meat of
water buffaloes now. We hope the government addresses the issue,” said a
Forest Department official.
The Mumbai Suburban Beef Dealer
Association has been protesting against the ban on slaughter of bulls by
refusing to provide the meat of water buffaloes. “Our monthly beef
requirement is nearly 4,500 to 5,000 kg. Now we have started procuring
chicken in a big way, besides we are also procuring mutton. It appears
to us that the animals are not satisfied,” the official said, adding
that the situation would be similar in zoos across the state.
Cow
slaughter was already banned in the state under the Maharashtra Animal
Preservation Act of 1976. The killing of bulls, bullock and buffaloes
for meat, however, was allowed with a “fit-for-slaughter” certificate.
In
February, President Pranab Mukherjee gave his assent to the Maharashtra
Animal Preservation (Amendment) Act of 1995, which in addition to the
earlier legislation bans the slaughter of bull and bullock. The state
government notified it earlier this month.
Implementing the 1995
act was a major mission for the BJP-Shiv Sena saffron alliance
government. Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and his two senior Cabinet
colleagues—Revenue and Agriculture Minister Eknath Khadse and Finance
and Planning Minister Sudhir Mungantiwar—had taken it upon themselves to
ensure that the President granted his ascent.
With the
implementation of the act, anyone found selling or in possession beef
can be jailed for up to five years and fined Rs 10,000.
Leader of
Opposition in Maharashtra Legislative Assembly Radhakrishna Vikhe-Patil
said on the ban: “The chief minister and finance minister say that they
want to promote tourism, modernise zoos, parks. How they are going to
do it? They always speak two different things – one contrary to the
other.”
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