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Prabhu Chavan says Congress is politicising the issue
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Minister for Animal Husbandry Prabhu Chavan at a meeting with officials in Mysuru on Tuesday.
| Photo Credit:
M.A. Sriram
Prabhu Chavan says Congress is politicising the issue
A day after the controversial Karnataka Prevention of Cow Slaughter and Preservation of Cattle Act, 2020 was notified, Minister for Animal Husbandry Prabhu Chavan on Tuesday claimed that the Act has caused no harm to farmers but to the Congress which is ‘politicising’ the issue.
Speaking to reporters in Mysuru after a review meeting of his department, he said no farmer has approached the government with a complaint to the decision taken by the government to safeguard cattle. “Farmers are happy as we are protecting the cows. Only the Congress party is having a problem on the decision taken by us,” Mr Chavan said, in reply to a question on the lack of alternative steps taken on the difficulties of farmers for loo
Updated Jan 13, 2021 | 13:19 IST About 35 cattle were being illegally transported to Mangaluru from Ranebennur in Davanagere district via Sringeri in Chikkamagaluru district Representational Image  |  Photo Credit: PTI
Bengaluru: The Karnataka Police on Wednesday made the first arrest under the recently enacted Karnataka Prevention of Slaughter and Preservation of Cattle Act, 2020. The first arrest was made in Chickmagalur district on Wednesday. A cleaner has been arrested and the vehicle and animals have been impounded, the police said.
The incidents took place in two different places in Sringeri police station limits. About 35 cattle were being illegally transported to Mangaluru from Ranebennur in Davanagere district via Sringeri in Chikkamagaluru district, the police said.
The Trials and Tribulations of Being a Muslim in Todayâs India
As the communal divide deepens with every passing day, Muslims in todayâs India have a lot to despair about and much more to be afraid of.
Photo: Reuters
Rights10/Jan/2021
It both rattles and embarrasses me deeply when even my childhood Muslim friends tell me that, in the end, when the mopping up begins, all my sympathies and ideology notwithstanding, I would probably be spared because of my name â but no mercy shall be shown to them.
I do not want to feel helpless like the Nobel laureate German physicist Otto Hahn. His intimate friend and co-worker of over three decades, Lise Meitner, was born Jewish. In 1938, she was eventually forced to flee Nazi Germany through the Netherlands with just 10 marks in her purse. All that a distraught Otto Hahn could do for her was to give her his motherâs diamond ring to bribe the border guards, if required.