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This beautiful, gentle animal who gives so much is egregiously treated by the very people who revere her. The whole sordid story is one of cruelty and corruption of the most egregious kind.... To keep them moving, drivers beat the animal across their hip bones, where there is no fat to cushion the blows. The cows are not allowed to rest or drink. Many cows sink to their knees. Drivers beat them and twist their battered tails to force them to rise. If that doesn’t work they torment the cows into moving by rubbing hot chilli peppers and tobacco into their eyes.
End Animal Slaughter’s Sandra Kyle has been visiting India for more than twenty-five years, and has recently returned from her latest trip. In the article she looks at illegal trafficking of cattle, and the rise of leather production in Kerala and Bangladesh.
Worker in a toxic Bangladeshi tannery
One of the most beautiful animals I have ever seen is the Indian cow.
Imposing in size, but with a sweet, docile and curious nature, the native
breed is most commonly light in colour, although there are brown and pied
cows as well. A distinguishing feature of the true Brahman cow is the
distinctive hump, evolved over time to help the animal survive in hot, arid
conditions. These animals are well-proportioned, with floppy ears, large
upcurving horns, and enormous expressive eyes and long straight eyelashes.
Revered by Hindus as ‘sacred’, the Indian cow is also called “Mother”
because she provides milk and, literally, the skin off her back. Yet this
beautiful, gentle animal who gives so much is egregiously treated by the
very people who revere her. While it is mainly Christians and Muslims who
carry out the trafficking, slaughter and leather processing, it is Hindus
who sell their cattle to the traffickers. The whole sordid story is one of
cruelty and corruption of the most egregious kind.
Nearly twenty years ago an expose by PETA first brought the problem to
light. This created a scandal that saw celebrities such as Chrissie Hynd,
Sir Paul McCartney, and the Dalai Llama calling for an end to the
trafficking.
The problem with illegal trafficking began in the 1990s, when the Hindu
nationalist party (BJP) came to power. When protection for the cow was
enhanced, including heavy restrictions around slaughter, an almost entirely
clandestine trade in cows for beef and leather began. This illegal
trafficking was mainly to Christian Kerala in the far South (where cow
slaughter is still legal) and neighbouring Bangladesh, a Muslim nation.
While regulations exist, widespread bribery and corruption by government
officials and veterinary surgeons means that they are not enforced.
Prominent Indian Animal Rights activist and veteran campaigner Mrs Meneka
Gandhi, Minister for Women and Children in the Narendra Modi government,
said at the time of the initial expose in 2000: “There is a huge amount of
trafficking of cattle to both West Bengal and Kerala. The ones going to West
Bengal go by truck and train and they go by the millions. The law says you
cannot transport more than 4 per truck but they are putting in up to 70.
When they go by train, each wagon is supposed to hold 80 to 100, but they
cram in up to 900. I’ve seen 900 cows coming out of the wagon of a train,
and 400 to 500 of them came out dead.”
‘The cattle are unloaded just before Calcutta, at Howrah, then beaten and
taken across to Bangladesh by road. Bangladesh, which has no cows of its
own, is the biggest beef exporter in the region. Between 10,000 and 15,000
cows go across that border every day. You can make out the route taken by
the trucks by the trail of blood they leave behind.”
When their destination is Kerala, the cows are taken on foot, tens of
thousands per day, to slaughterhouses on the border. “Because they have
walked and walked and walked the cattle have lost a lot of weight, so to
increase the weight and the amount of money they will receive, the
traffickers make them drink water laced with copper sulphate, which destroys
their kidneys and makes it impossible for them to pass the water – so when
they are weighed they have 15kg of water inside them and are in extreme
agony,” Mrs Gandhi stated.
“It’s a hideous journey,” wrote PETA President, Ingred Newkirk, who followed
a caravan of cows to Kerala. “To keep them moving, drivers beat the animal
across their hip bones, where there is no fat to cushion the blows. The cows
are not allowed to rest or drink. Many cows sink to their knees. Drivers
beat them and twist their battered tails to force them to rise. If that
doesn’t work they torment the cows into moving by rubbing hot chilli peppers
and tobacco into their eyes.”
When they finally make it to the slaughterhouses, the PETA investigation
revealed, they were slaughtered with repeated hammer blows, which beat their
skulls to a pulp.
It is a devastating story, and the worst of it is that it is still happening
today.
I recently watched a video that took a look at tanneries on the
India-Bangladeshi border. Skins are acquired by the tanneries from
neighbouring slaughterhouses, and processed by employees working under
appalling conditions. These places are swelteringly hot, and there is an
ever-present pungent stench from toxic chemicals used to process the hides.
The poorest of the poor work in this industry, including innocent children
who also handle the chemicals. Eventually the waste spills out into the
streets and then into the waterways, making them black and viscous. Humans,
fish and other animals all become sick or die as a result of this industry.
Another shocking revelation in the video I watched were images of a buyer
for an Italian shoe company walking around and inspecting the hides. In
subsequent shots we saw shoes being placed in boxes with an Italian
brandname, to be packaged and exported to Europe.The illegal trafficking of
cattle, their treatment, slaughter, and processing of their hides for
leather is a story of unbelievable cruelty, but also poverty, greed and
ignorance. It is also a story of unethical employers who exploit their
labour, and wealthy international companies who perpetuate the misery in
order to profit from their immoral gains.
There is so much misery tied up with cattle meat and leather in India.
Animals transported in punishing conditions who are whipped and beaten as
they travel to their destination. Primitive and barbaric slaughter methods
in unregulated slaughterhouses. Unsanitary conditions and poor pay for
workers, including children. A toxic environment that makes people and
animals alike sick.
This is the chain of production of some Italian-brand shoes and no doubt
many other High Street brands. It is why vegans don’t wear leather, and why
non-vegans shouldn’t either.
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