NEW DELHI, India (Reuters) — A Hindu mob killed a Muslim man in India late last month over rumours he butchered a cow.
The murder unleashed violence that police blamed on tension fuelled by politicians who seek strict protection of an animal many Hindus consider sacred.
Many members of India’s majority Hindu community see cows as holy, but beef is widely eaten by Hindus in parts of the south, as well as by members of lower castes and minority Muslims and Christians.
Tougher measures to safeguard cows are often used as a rallying call by politicians seeking to win Hindu votes, sometimes leading to Hindu-Muslim riots.
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Mohammad Akhlaq, a blacksmith, died Sept. 28 after being kicked and beaten with stones by at least 10 men in the town of Dadri, 50 kilometres from the capital of New Delhi.
A larger group had earlier gathered outside his home, accusing his family of secretly eating beef.
“I screamed and shouted to tell the mob that we did not eat beef, and they should stop beating my father and my brother, but they pushed me away,” said his daughter, Sajida Saifi, who watched the attack helplessly.
Akhlaq’s son was taken to hospital with severe injuries.
The murder triggered clashes between Hindus and Muslims in the town, and extra police were deployed to keep the peace.
The rhetoric about cow protection had emboldened some people to act as vigilantes, said police officer Anurag Kumar, who is investigating the lynching.
“The incident is shocking,” he said. “The Hindu mob felt they had a licence to kill.”
India is the world’s largest exporter of beef and its fifth biggest consumer, but prime minister Narendra Modi’s government wants a nationwide ban on cow slaughter and the beef trade, which is run mostly by Muslims.
It has clamped down on the illegal trade of cattle with Muslim-majority neighbour Bangladesh, and two states ruled by Modi’s party have tightened laws to protect cows.
Police arrested six of the 30 people accused in Akhlaq’s murder, and sent a sample of meat from his home for forensic tests to check if it was beef.
Eating beef is not illegal in India’s populous northern state of Uttar Pradesh, where Dadri is located, although the slaughter of cows is banned.