Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Nagaland has a beef with Delhi over bid to ban dog meat

- Rahul Karmakar rahul.karmakar@hindustant­imes.com

GUWAHATI: Nagaland attacked Union minister Maneka Gandhi over a move to ban consumptio­n of dog meat — like beef elsewhere in India — in the North-east.

Dog meat is a delicacy among many Naga tribes in Nagaland and adjoining states as well as some communitie­s in Mizoram.

In a letter to department of north eastern region minister Jitendra Singh a few days ago, Gandhi cited the Food Safety and Standards Regulation

Act, 2011, that does not allow dogs, cats and other animals to be slaughtere­d for food. She said consumptio­n of dog meat was both illegal and cruel.

But Nagas say Gandhi has no business telling them what they cannot eat or wield rules that are not applicable in Nagaland.

“Indian laws, related to religion or food habits, cannot be imposed in Nagaland because the state’s special status ensures preservati­on of social customs. We have been eating dog meat, as therapy too, for generation­s and we cannot stop eating now just because someone feels we should not,” Chuba Ozukum, president of Nagaland’s apex social organisati­on Naga Hoho, said.

Nagas, he added, will oppose strongly if the ban on sale and consumptio­n of dog meat is imposed.

Officials of Nagaland’s health department said they were looking into the cruelty aspect. “We have asked traders and butchers to follow proper procedures on treating dogs and other animals for consumptio­n,” Abhijit Sinha, commission­er-secretary in the department, said.

The state’s additional chief secretary, RB Thong, said enforcing a dog meat ban would be very difficult.

Fearing public backlash, the Nagaland government went slow on a legal notice that an Assam-based petitioner had sent in March against illegal trade of dogs for consumptio­n. Though the demand for dog meat is high — a kilo sells for `300-500 depending on availabili­ty — the animal is not farmed for consumptio­n. The dogs for most kitchens and ethnic restaurant­s are thus smuggled from neighbouri­ng states, mainly Assam.

 ??  ?? Illustrati­on: ABHIMANYU SINHA
Illustrati­on: ABHIMANYU SINHA

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