
‘Cattle slaughter must be banned at national level to boost milk production': Odisha BJP MP
In an interview with The Indian Express, Mahtab spoke about his Bill and related issues including the parliamentary standoff. Excerpts:
Yes, I sought leave to introduce three private members' Bills, including one to prohibit the slaughter of cattle. Many states of India legislated Acts against cow slaughter in the late 1950s and 1960s. I want a law to ban cattle slaughter at the all-India level. The reason is that we need more and better milk production, for which the preservation of cattle wealth is important.
It is not necessary. We don't need a Constitutional amendment when a majority of states have already implemented it. To bring uniformity to the law it is necessary because a large cattle population is traded from one state to another. Especially in the case of Odisha, it is necessary because a large number of cattle are traded from Odisha to other states. Trading is not stopped but killing of cattle needs to be stopped.
For that society has to take charge with some support from the government. Stray cows, which have been abandoned by owners or are left to fend for themselves, need shelter. They have to be looked after through the construction of gaushalas (cow shelters). Not only on highways, but also in cities, we find a large number of cows outside and that is a nuisance too. That is why a large number of gaushalas need to be constructed and adequate funding needs to be given. We need better cows but the stray cow menace has to be stopped. It is only by taking care of them that we can stop this, and not by killing them.
That will not be a problem. There will be some opposition but the main thing is that you need to take care of animals, especially domestic animals… Society also has to take care. There was a time when large numbers of unethical things were being done in society but they have been stopped.
I don't understand why the Opposition is doing it. The window is open so if there is some mistake that they allege, the correction can be done (in Bihar's electoral rolls)… Stalling the functioning of Parliament is unacceptable.
Secondly, the EC is a constitutional body. If you discuss it in the House, who is going to reply to the questions that will arise during the discussion? If you are discussing something in the absence of the EC, there is a specific rule in Parliament that you should not say something against someone who is not present in the House… I think the Opposition is deliberately doing it because it has an agenda not to allow the House to function.

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