Muslim lawmaker attacked in Jammu
Beef row grows
By our correspondents
October 09, 2015
OCCUPIED SRINAGAR: Lawmakers from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s party tried to assault an opposition member in a state parliament on Thursday over eating beef, as debate rages in India over intolerance of religious minorities.
Television footage showed several Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) legislators, who consider cows sacred, pushing and shoving Abdul Rashid, a Muslim, in the occupied Jammu and Kashmir state assembly for holding a provocative “beef party”.
”No amount of condemnation can be enough for what happened today,” opposition leader Omar Abdullah told reporters outside the assembly in the northern region’s main city of Srinagar.
”Trying to beat up a member, this is the first time I have ever seen something like this in any house,” Abdullah, whose party walked out of the chamber over the attack.
”Do I assault everyone who eats pork or alcohol?”
Rashid served beef kebabs at the “party” this week in protest against a ban on killing and eating cows in the occupied state.
The issue ignited in the region after a top court last month ordered the long-standing but little enforced prohibition be strictly implemented.
The attack comes as a wider debate rages in Hindu-majority India over hardliners’ intolerance of Muslims and other religious minorities, many of whom eat beef as a source of protein.
Late last month, a mob beat a Muslim man to death in Uttar Pradesh state over rumours that he had eaten beef. The man was dragged from his home and attacked while his 22-year-old son was also severely injured.
Television footage showed several Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) legislators, who consider cows sacred, pushing and shoving Abdul Rashid, a Muslim, in the occupied Jammu and Kashmir state assembly for holding a provocative “beef party”.
”No amount of condemnation can be enough for what happened today,” opposition leader Omar Abdullah told reporters outside the assembly in the northern region’s main city of Srinagar.
”Trying to beat up a member, this is the first time I have ever seen something like this in any house,” Abdullah, whose party walked out of the chamber over the attack.
”Do I assault everyone who eats pork or alcohol?”
Rashid served beef kebabs at the “party” this week in protest against a ban on killing and eating cows in the occupied state.
The issue ignited in the region after a top court last month ordered the long-standing but little enforced prohibition be strictly implemented.
The attack comes as a wider debate rages in Hindu-majority India over hardliners’ intolerance of Muslims and other religious minorities, many of whom eat beef as a source of protein.
Late last month, a mob beat a Muslim man to death in Uttar Pradesh state over rumours that he had eaten beef. The man was dragged from his home and attacked while his 22-year-old son was also severely injured.
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