Mob lynches Muslim man for transporting cows in India

NEW DELHI: A Muslim man died early Saturday after he was attacked by vigilantes while transporting cows in western India’s Rajasthan state, police said.

India has witnessed a spate of lynchings by Hindu extremist “cow vigilantes” targeting Muslims and low-caste Dalits accused of killing cows or eating beef and other mob attacks over child kidnapping rumours.

Akbar Khan, 28, was walking with another person and two cows through Alwar district, around 100 miles (160 kilometres) from the state capital Jaipur, when some local villagers attacked them late Friday night.

“The incident of alleged lynching of a person transporting bovines in Alwar district is condemnable,” Rajasthan’s chief minister Vasundhara Raje tweeted after the incident.

“Police have registered a case and are questioning two suspects. Strictest possible action shall be taken against the perpetrators,” she added.

Rajasthan police inspector general Hemant Priyadarshi said two primary suspects who had been in police custody had since been arrested.

“Both of them were caught from the crime scene and were arrested after initial questioning and investigations,” he said.

“We are still trying to identify all others involved in this late night crime. Before dying, the victim told us that the attackers accused him of being a cattle smuggler,” Priyadarshi added.

Police said they were still trying to ascertain the exact sequence of events, reason for the attack and the number of attackers.

At least 22 people have been killed by mobs in different parts of India over issues ranging from cattle theft, eating beef and rumours of child kidnapping this year.

Cows are considered sacred in Hindu-majority India, where squads of vigilantes roam highways inspecting livestock trucks.

Slaughtering cows is illegal in many Indian states and some also require a licence for transporting them across state borders.

Leave a Comment