Sunday, November 29, 2020

Ban Beef


Dalit-Online 

Weekly e news paper 

Editor: Nagaraja.M.R.. Vol.16.....Issue. 83................06/12/2020 



 

 


SHOCKING  IMAGES :  Dark  Side  of   Eating  Meat

ADULTS  ONLY     Watch video :

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LCPNRsYij3o&oref=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DLCPNRsYij3o&has_verified=1  ,

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KezHKbUzy0A ,

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MuW4lwa6FRI  ,

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wf6vGNaCxgc  ,

 

Editorial  :  Dalits , Muslims & Cow Slaughter

-          An  Appeal  to  H.E.President  of  India

 

       Bigger stronger animal  feeds  on smaller weak animal.  Law of Nature.  In the same way , all over the world  in a particular area or  a  country stronger majority community   subjugates  the weak , smaller communities.  

       Since  centuries  dalits  were subjugated into doing menial jobs  and   their livelihood depended on whatever  was thrown  at  them.  Civilizations  dawned , people  became civilized in their  outlook , but deep inside  uncivilized , animal  resides in many people.

     There are good as well as bad people in all communities, religions & all walks of life.  Whenever  a terrorist  strike  happens ,  Muslims  are blamed.  For all miseries  in India , Dalits are blamed.  Just imagine  if there was no barber , how civilized a person will be without hair cutting ?  Just think there is no  sweeper   to clean drainage line ,  how   houses , roads will be  full of excreta , human rejections , how stinky &  disease prone it will be ? 

    Dalits are doing yeoman   commendable  service  to society ,  keeping  all the others in a civilized manner  in a healthy environment. Nobody recognizes their service.  Since centuries , dalits were entrusted with the job of removing carcass of cattles, it was not their choice, it was  mandated by majority community at that time. Being utterly poor ,  dalits  depended on  cattle meat for food and  used  bones , hides for footwear , etc. .  Now , few individuals  all of a sudden  are trying to turn upside down , this centuries old practice and  cow vigilantes are attacking  dalits. Few are taking law into their hands.  What  three  great  acharyas – Sri Shankaracharya , Sri Ramanujacharya , Sri  Madhwacharya  failed to achieve , what  Sri Gowthama Buddha ,  Sri Mahaveera  failed to achieve  stopping animal killing , now cow vigilantes are trying to achieve  the same with violence.

    Say , after two decades  few  groups , individuals will proclaim everybody must stop eating vegetarian food . Then  can  all veggies  turn into non veg , not feasible.   With regards to certain section of society eating non veg is a taboo , with others  non veg with exclusion of beef , pork is ok. Food is the choice of individual.

   Now ,  let us see the facts  for practical way forward :

1.      Since centuries Dalits  are in the  profession of  cow slaughter not by choice , but by compulsion of times.

2.      Since centuries  dalits &   others   are eating beef as it is cheaper than other meat.

3.      Cows  are  holy  for hindus equivalent to mother herself  and equivalent to god.  Cow products are  used since centuries in  hindu religious rituals.

4.      In rural house holds , when a  mother dies while delivering baby or  when  a mother  cann’t breast feed baby due to lack of milk  , COW in the  house hold becomes  a  surrogate  mother for the baby. Baby  feeds , lives on cow’s  milk.

5.      Inspite of such great respect  many hindu  folk  sell  old  , barren , diseased cows  to muslim or dalit   buyers  knowing  fully  well  that  buyer cann’t  get milk from  the cow  only he can get meat & hide from slaughtering it. Some  hindu  folk  drive away  old , diseased , barren cows  from their home. It is same as driving away old , diseased mother  , deserting our own mother.

6.      In  many Islamic  countries , jewish  countries    pig  meat /  pork  is banned ,  hindus  & Christians  who go to such countries for job / business   abide  by  laws  of Islamic countries.  They give up eating pork although way back in their home countries  they consume pork.

 

Practical Way  Forward :

1.      Banning cow slaughter , beef   is ok in national interest ,  in the  interest of religious sentiments of a community.

2.      Government must provide alternate food items to consumers at affordable prices than beef.

3.      Government  must  extend helping hand to Dalits , Muslims who are  in cow slaughter trade to switch over to other business.

4.      Government  must  charge sheet the seller of  cows , deserter of cows  not merely transporter  , buyer  or  the  butcher.

5.      Government must discourage farmers  from rearing cattles when they are incapable of  looking after old cattles.

6.      Government must educate people  about reducing  milk products consumption; When Milk  products consumption reduces automatically  rearing of cattle reduces.

7.      Most important of all ,  when  a pork  eating  Indian  goes to  Saudi Arabia  on job assignment and  lives  there for two decades. When he can  simply  give up pork , follow the rule of pork ban and change his dietary habbits ,  why cann’t others  reciprocate the same here with respect to beef ban.

8.      Government must adopt a way of educating  people about good dietary habbits  rather than policy  of stick.

9.      Cow vigilantes who take law into their own hands instead of reporting to authorities must be legally prosecuted.

10. Government must  set up   FREE  Cow sheds with  adequate fodder  supplies  all over the country on urgent basis to accommodate orphaned cows , diseased cows and old cows.  If government fails  to set up  it proves it’s  vanity.

 

Bottomline :  As per scientific studies , human beings digestive system has evolved to digest  vegetarian food  not non vegetarian food.  Choice is left to consumers.

 

 

India tops in cow slaughterhouse and most slaughtering are doing Hindus

By SKN WEB - Tuesday, April 28, 2015 

 

India tops in cow slaughterhouse and most slaughtering are doing Hindus. Recently I just came to know about the slaughterhouse rank in India, and most slaughtering are doing Hindus. After Brazil India is second highest, below is a pathetic story about slaughterhouse processes. Here India’s largest al Kabeer slaughterhouse taken in. I am not sure about the authenticity of this write-up, please being verified yourself.

 

Al-Kabeer exports Pvt.Ltd. Rudraram Village, Andhra Pradesh, Patancheru, Medak, Hyderabad – 500 033.

 

 Do you know that the biggest cow slaughterhouse (cow killing factory) in the WORLD is located just 30 km from Hyderabad in “Rudraram village” near Patancheru. It is called Alkabir in built nearly 400 acres of land with High security and most workers are Hindus. The story of Al-Kabir Hyderabad Tyranny: Don’t think that these animals are killed easily and painlessly. Their agonies start along before they are dead. They are brought to Alkair in trucks, from far away distances for economy, 20-25 huge buffalo are stacked up in each truck. Nobody cares to feed them food, or even water while in transit. They are packed so tightly in the truck, that they are hurt by each other. By the time they arrive, they are no more capable of standing on their own feet! They are moved with force of whips…


They are brought into the final ground, where at least a thousand animals are stored. This is their last open air. They are kept here for four days, hungry and thirsty. Then their legs are broken and eyes poked, so that a ‘Certificate’ can be obtained about their uselessness. The hunger and thirst of four days cause the hemoglobin to move from blood in to fat. The meat with higher hemoglobin fetches better prices. 


Now these animals are pushed into washing showers. Extremely hot water (200 degrees centigrade!) is sprayed on them for five minutes, to soften their skins, so they will be easy to remove. The animal’s faints at this point, but it is not dead yet. Now it is hung upside down with one leg, on a chain-pulley conveyor. Then half of the neck is slit. This drains the blood, but does not kill the animal. After death, the skin swells thick, which sells for a poor price. But the skin of live Animals is still thin, which has better economic value. On one side the blood is dripping from the neck, and on the other side a hole is made in stomach, from which air is pumped inside. This causes the body to swell, making it easier to peel the skin. After removing the leather, the animal is cut into four pieces: head, legs, body, and tail.

 

 The machines remove bones, and pack small pieces of meat into cans for shipping to Alkabir’s headquarters in Hyderabad. From there it is shipped to Mumbai for exporting to its final destination. Working! Most of the people working here are Hindus. The Director, Subhash Sabarwal, is an NRI in Dubai, and his brother, Satish Sabarwal, manages the plant. The other principals are Ghulam Mohammed Sheikh (Dubai), Dilip Himmat KothariB.N. Raman, etc. Even though the main workers on cutting machines are from Kerala and Muslims from Mumbai, the administration, security, etc. consists mainly of Hindus.

 

There are several other equally large (or large) plants in India, owned and operated similarly by NRI’s and Arab citizens in cooperation. The people working here are paid very handsomely. This is a big attraction. A monthly salary of Rs. 50,000 to 75,000 is common. At the site, there are many veterinarians, but their job is not to save healthy live. Their only concern is to see that the meat does not carry any germs which may hurt the customers. In fact, there is a small army of government veterinarians, whose job is to see that healthy and useful animals do not get butchered. But these corrupt officials write false certificates according to wishes of Alkabir. You cannot easily enter Alkabir, because outside people are not allowed in there. Even the local veterinarians and police cannot go inside, so there is no question about the other local poor people even coming close to its boundaries…Security is tightened at nights with hunting dogs. Now the neighboring people do not even come close to it.

 

SECONDLY

·         Beef exports up 44% in 4 years, India is top seller - The Times of India

·         Beef exports up 44% in 4 years, India is top seller - The Center's Pink Revolution to promote meat production and export has led to a 44% increase in meat consumption and export in four years, but it has failed to regulate...

 

THIRDLY

World Beef Exports: Ranking Of Countries

·         World Beef Exports: Ranking Of Countries Four (4) countries exported more than 1.1 million metric tons of beef in 2013: Brazil, India, Australia & the United States.

 

 World | 9,165,000 
Rank      Country                2013                      % Of World
1.            Brazil                    1,849,000             20.17%
2.            India                     1,765,000             19.26% 
3.            Australia              1,593,000             17.38% 
4.            United States     1,172,000             12.79%
5.            New Zealand      529,000                 5.77 

 

AGAINST CRUELTY IN INHUMAN SLAUGHTERHOUSES

 

"...Everyday millions of people go to McDonalds or Kentucky Fried Chicken and enjoy a juicy hamburger or consume a crispy, golden-fried chicken. Billions of families around the world eat meat and share laughs together over the dinner table. But, what goes on behind the closed doors of slaughterhouses before producers deliver perfectly packaged meat to our grocery stores? 

Employees of Kentucky Fried Chicken, one of the biggest fast-food chains of poultry, were caught in July 2004, torturing their chickens for fun. Workers were videoed stomping on chickens, kicking them, and slamming them violently against floors and walls. Workers also ripped the animals' beaks, twisted their heads off, spray-painted their faces, and squeezed the chickens' bodies until they would die.

Each year a person will consume 230 pounds of meat. Together, the world consumes 2.6 billion pounds of dairy cow a year. Eight billion animals a year are slaughtered for food. However, the conditions under which they are processed are brutal. For example, animals are supposed to have space when they are transported but instead they are packed together, not having any room to move, walk, and barely breathe. This causes many animals to become sick. Some die on the way. 

In fact, half a million animals a year that arrive at slaughterhouses are either dead or in unacceptable condition for slaughter. Many of the remaining animals have broken limbs. Even these are further injured when they are unloaded. 

Other forms of brutality include the "Halal method," where the animal's neck is slit in two and a half spots and, while conscious, allowed to bleed to death. A similar "method" is hanging the live, fully conscious animals upside down while their carotid arteries are cut. 

Once aware of these procedures, many fast-food fans are reconsidering their diets. "It is repulsive and sick what is being committed by humans to animals in the U.S.," said Ashley Coutier, a resident of Sparta. "It should be stopped as soon as possible." 

In 1960, the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act was passed, but unfortunately everyday laws are violated, and the truth needs come out. "I have heard about some of the things slaughterhouses do, but there are some things I just don't want to know and I am better off not knowing about," said Steve Snow, a sophomore at Sparta High School..."

http://media.www.tchnews.com/media/storage/paper840/news/2008/03/10/News/Animal.Cruelty.In.Slaughterhouses-3259951.shtml




"...A wise woman named Linda McCartney once said, %u201CIf slaughterhouses had glass walls, everyone in the world would be a vegetarian%u201D.

This is one of the truest statements ever made. If people thought about or saw what really happens to animals in slaughterhouses for more than a second, it would get to them and they would not be able to bring themselves to still be a carnivore. Those animals endure some of the cruelest treatment and neglect. Also, slaughterhouses are kept in the most unsanitary conditions and violate more laws then almost any other business. The slaughter of animals for human consumption should be banned.

First of all, the statistics show it would benefit land, animals%u2019 lives, and the grain and food supply if we stopped eating meat. Each person consumes 230 pounds of animals each year. Together we consume 2.6 billion pounds of dairy cow a year. There has been an increase in the amount of animals we consume and how much grain it%u2019s taking to feed them. Eight billion animals a year are slaughtered for food. [Ed. note: In 2002 the total was ten billion.]

The breakdown of each animal that is slaughtered is 38 million cows and calves, 95 million hogs, 5 million sheep and goats, 278 million turkeys, 20 million ducks, and over 7 billion chickens. The average cow should live 20 years but because they are not allowed to have a normal life and they are just raised to be slaughtered, the average life expectancy is 6 to 8 years, and sometimes even then the cows only live to 14 months. The amount of animals that are raised annually for slaughter is 30 times more then the total human population in the US, and more then the number of humans in the world.

Twenty years ago livestock consumed 6% of Mexico%u2019s grain and today they consume nearly 50%, and in Canada 77% of their grain is used to raise livestock. If American countries alone would reduce their meat consumption by just 10% that would save enough grain to feed 60 million people. The reality is it takes 4 acres of land to feed a meat eater, but only 1/2 an acre or less to feed a vegetarian. On 1/2 an acre of land 10,000lbs of apples and 20,000lbs of potatoes can be grown successfully into food. Only 100lbs of beef can be raised on that. Over a lifetime, a vegetarian will save 21 cows, 14 sheep, 12 hogs, and 1400 chickens from being slaughtered. They will also save 1 acre of trees a year from being cut down.

Slaughterhouses shouldn%u2019t be allowed to still be in operation. They have violated almost every restriction, law, and rule that has been placed on their industry. Almost everything added to the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act in 1960 is being violated. It%u2019s known that no matter what the animals condition is the butcher takes it into their own hands to make the most money possible. There are rules about loading and unloading that are broken every second. The animals are supposed to have space when they are transported but instead they are packed together like sardines.

There are rules about cruelty to animals such as no torturing or subjecting them to unnecessary pain and suffering, and no keeping them in cages that there is not sufficient room to go with their measurements. One of the biggest issues is that the animals are not supposed to be exposed to their own kind getting slaughtered, but they are constantly having to watch their own kind getting dragged mercilessly to their brutal death. It%u2019s also against the law to slaughter animals below 6 months, pregnant animals, sick animals, and young animals who are supplying milk. A slaughterhouse in Texas had 22 violations during a period of 6 months. During one of those inspections there were 9 live cattle found dangling from an overhead chain. Yet this is how slaughterhouses operate over and over again each day. It doesn%u2019t help that cases against them are usually not pursued because venturing deep into slaughterhouses is not an idea liked by officials. Transporting animals should be like transporting a human, each one having their own space and each one being reasonably taken care of.

However, if people were treated like the livestock while riding a bus or any other kind of transportation, many people would be facing serious charges. Just because it is abuse to an animal and not a human doesn%u2019t mean any less should be done about it. Animals are packed and pressed together so close into vehicles that they can%u2019t move and can barley breathe. A lot of times just in the process of loading the animals they will trample each other to death and blind one another with their horns. The law states that in that process they should have food, water, veterinary services, and protection from natural elements (wind, rain, fire, etc.). That is the care that any living thing should be entitled too. Those poor animals don%u2019t ever get to see a drop of any of those things though. While getting an animal from a distant place into the city where they are loaded, the animals are sometimes made to run there.

No matter what the whether conditions are. Red chili powder is put in their eyes in order to force them to run faster. They are beaten and severely tortured just to accomplish getting them to a destination. Sometimes the drivers of the vehicles make fast turns and stops that causes the animals to get knocked around and injured. The animals fall on each other which causes suffocation and more broken bones. When it finally comes down to unloading the animals, the condition they are in is appalling. Half a million animals a year that arrive at slaughterhouses are dead or in unacceptable condition for slaughter. Other animals are half dead but are still just picked up and thrown down on the concrete. Many have broken limbs but are further injured when they are getting unloaded. The handlers don%u2019t bother with kindness or care because they figure they are going to face the butchers knife anyway.

While keeping the animals before it%u2019s their time to be slaughtered they endure a series of inhumane procedures and treatment. PETA described what they witnessed one morning at a slaughterhouse %u201CBy 10:00 a.m. there were already more than a dozen downed cattle. One bull kept trying to rise to his feet but could not. He struggled before collapsing under the scorching sun, blood oozing out of his nose; his legs and horns broken.%u201D This is one example of what someone saw, but there are things that happen like that every day.

There is also a videotape that was secretly set up in an Iowa pork plant that caught live hogs squealing and kicking as they were being lowered into a tank of water. Unfortunately, there are things that are more unbelievable then that which happen and have not been caught on tape yet. However, even though it%u2019s not captured on tape we do know some other things that happen in slaughterhouses. Some of the treatment includes the use of electric prods, castration with no anesthetic, branding and tail docking with no pain relief, and hot iron de-horning with no pain relief. The de-horning involves pressing scorching heat onto the calves horns for a full 30 seconds then repeating it on the other side for another 30 seconds. Also, de-beaking with no pain relief. For that they use hot glue guns or cigarette lighters to cut through bone, cartilage, and tissue of the birds. In a different part of the slaughter house there may be birds that are alive and dangling by their feet on metal hooks. Electricity stuns them as they roll on the line for the neck blade to come down and kill them. Other handling that the animals are subjected to is the hens are forced into a schedule that restricts their water for 2 weeks and cows are limited to 2 milkings a day, when they are supposed to have 6. The average life span of a hen is 16 years but with what they endure in slaughterhouses it%u2019s shortened to 18 months. Roosters aren%u2019t that lucky, they are gassed right away and their remains are sent to rendering plants. Others don%u2019t get to be put out of their misery so fast.

There are animals that have their legs broken or hacked off so they can%u2019t run away. Some animals who are incapacitated are left laying around for days, suffering much neglect. If they%u2019re left laying outside long enough, a number of them freeze to death in the winter and fry to death in the summer. Many of the animals suffer the equivalent to that when they are dragged with chains and pushed with tractors, causing torn ligaments and broken bones.

The way in which the animals are slaughtered is tragic. The animals suffer copious amounts of pain and are sometimes alive and alert when they are being slaughtered. Every animal is supposed to be separated from others, be rendered unconscious, and then be slaughtered. They are not supposed to be dragged by their legs, ears, and horns. However, that usually is how it is done.

There are a few methods of slaughtering that are practiced, and not one is humane and how it%u2019s supposed to be done. One is decapitating the animal. Another is the Halal method where the neck is slit in 2 1/2 spots while they are conscious and that forces them to bleed to death. In that case the animal is alive and aware that they are severely bleeding and they are in excruciating pain. Burying an animal%u2019s head in the ground is not a common practice but it is still used. That way they are suffocated to death. One of the most mortifying ways of slaughtering is %u201Csticking a long iron rod through the anal opening, through the body, and making it emerge through the mouth%u201D.

All the while the animal, usually a pig, is squealing endlessly. Sometimes there is not even that much effort put into slaughtering the animal and they will just burn them to death. Cattle are many times stunned in the head with a steel bolt, their throats are slit, then they are left laying around to bleed to death. The bleeding method is used when they want the least damage to the carcass as possible. The animal is cut in a place where they will bleed the fastest. One man that has worked in a slaughterhouse says %u201CThey blink. They make noises. The head moves, the eyes are wide and looking around%u201D. He watches animals die a slow and painful death everyday when the animals are perfectly alive and conscious. He also said, %u201CSome would survive as far as the tail cutter, the belly ripper, and the hide puller. They die, piece by piece". Many animals do make it as far as being skinned when they are still living and feeling pain to the fullest.

Last of all, slaughterhouses do the least proficient job of cleaning up after animals are killed. It would be bad enough living near a slaughterhouse, but many neighbors say the worst thing is not the thought. They are constantly inhaling the nauseating stench each and every day. Neighbors also have entrails, skin, joints, and blood being dropped onto their property. Birds of prey get a hold of the barley disposed remains, fly away with them, then drop it on the near by people%u2019s land. There are usually rivers of blood flowing around the slaughterhouses and sometimes make it as far as to where the neighbors can see or smell it. The bones are boiled on the slaughter house premise which causes them to create further pollution and stench. The skins are sitting around outside in piles, sometimes for long periods of time, waiting for the tanneries to come pick them up. In unsanitary towns the carcasses are transported around with out being frozen. The water flowing through slaughterhouses go through treatment tanks like public sewers and then they end up spilling into creeks and rivers, generating more pollution. A number of slaughter houses have been ordered to add more washers and thorouly clean up. The evidence shows that many have not followed that order because the swelling of the rivers have not gone down yet.

Slaughterhouses have no right to be doing what they are doing. They perform every operation illegally. They don%u2019t give the animals food, water, shelter, veterinary services, or humane treatment. There is a pile of violations on them and yet they still continue to break more laws. Then on top of that they cause pollution and a disturbance to their surrounding neighbors. For some reason they think that in their industry they are allowed to make their own rules and do business however they please.

We need to show them that that%u2019s not allowed by shutting them down right away.



http://www.all-creatures.org/articles/ar-aninsidelook.html

SOLUTIONS WE REQUIRE (THESE OR BETTER):

 



"First, rules must be clear so that enforcement is not an inherently subjective process prone to mistakes and abuse. In particular, the downer loophole must be closed. ...The current flawed rule depends on plant workers summoning a USDA inspector back to reevaluate an animal who becomes nonambulatory after initial inspection, in order for the inspector to decide if the animal can be slaughtered, a system that seems bound to fail given the enormous pressure plant workers are under by their company superiors to move the maximum number of animals quickly to slaughter. This system creates financial incentives for precisely those abuses that we witnessed in the undercover footage....

 

"For the animals, removing current incentives that encourage workers to try every cruel tactic imaginable to move downers to the kill box would alleviate suffering. If crippled animals cannot be sold for food, slaughter plants have no reason to prolong their misery to try to get them through the slaughter process."

Temple Grandin, Professor, Colorado State University and author of Animals in Translation, testified, " I have worked for over 30 years to improve the treatment of animals at slaughter plants. Half the cattle and 25% of the pigs are handled in facilities I have designed. ...The recent video of dairy cows being tortured with a forklift made me sick. The abuse of cattle at this plant was 100% caused by a lack of employee supervision and a complete failure of the USDA inspectors. The Humane Slaughter Act prohibits dragging of crippled animals, and it was not enforced..... 

"[M]any of the ... regulations are vague and subject to different interpretations. Inspectors need better training and clear directives to improve consistency. It is impossible for different inspectors to be consistent when vague terminology is used such as %u2018unnecessary pain and suffering.'"



Grandin explained, "The present system of USDA inspection is like having traffic police giving out speeding tickets when they think cars are speeding. Police departments are able to enforce the speed limits in a uniform manner because the officer MEASURES a car's speed with radar. The decision to pull a car over is based on a measurement, not subjective judgment of speed. For other traffic rules such as being in the wrong lane, the rules are very clearly written so that the officers will interpret them the same way."

 

Grandin recommended clear bans on certain practices. She further recommended "animal based outcome standards [measured with] numerical scoring. For example, the percentage of animals that fall during handling can be caused by either a slick floor or rough handling by people. Falling is an outcome of bad equipment, poorly trained people, or very weak cows that should have never been brought to the plant. Measuring the percentage of cows that fall at a plant is a sensitive indicator of three different types of problems [which can then be corrected]. The percentage of cattle falling can never be zero, so falling cannot be banned, but it should be kept at a very low level."

 

Grandin developed a numerical scoring system during a survey in 1996 of slaughter plants.

 

Grandin concluded, "I recommend that the USDA adopt numerical scoring to make enforcement of the Humane Slaughter Act more uniform and to uphold higher standards. Many progressive inspectors are already informally using it. For the practices that are prohibited, a handbook of very clear guidelines is needed for enforcement. It would list prohibited practices where there is a zero tolerance."

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http://www.animallawcoalition.com/farm-animals/article/492

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Brussels - The European Commission on Thursday called for new rules aimed at reducing animal suffering in Europe's butcheries.

Under the proposals, slaughterhouses should appoint a trained staffer responsible for ensuring that animals are being treated humanely.

Such a person would, among other things, have to ensure that animals which are stunned do not regain consciousness before they are slaughtered.

Manufacturers of stunning equipment would have to provide detailed instructions on how to stun animals, while European governments would have to create research centres tasked with assisting official inspectors.

"As a society we have a duty of care to animals, which includes minimising distress and avoiding pain throughout the slaughtering process," said EU Health Commissioner Androulla Vassiliou.

Vassiliou's proposals, which are not likely to be approved by EU governments until next year, were welcomed by animal-rights groups.

"These proposals are a step in the right direction and will benefit millions of animals," said Sonja Van Tichelen of Eurogroup for Animals, a pressure group.

"It is unacceptable in a civilised society that animals have to suffer in their final moments. So much of their suffering can be avoided or decreased by having well-trained staff and by using appropriate stunning techniques," Van Tichelen said.

Groups representing meat traders and slaughterhouses said they still needed to study the proposals to find out whether such measures would result in higher production costs.

"A good cost-benefit analysis is necessary. Generally speaking we cannot be against measures that aim at protecting animals," said Jean-Luc Meriaux of the European Livestock and Meat Trading Union.

Officials in Brussels note that smaller slaughterhouses may be exempted from the new rules.

Nearly 360 million pigs, sheep, goats and cattle, as well as several billion poultry, are killed in EU slaughterhouses each year.

A further 25 million animals are slaughtered by the fur industry, according to commission figures.

To ensure fair competition, the commission's proposals would also apply to non-EU producers who export their products to member states. (dpa)



http://www.topnews.in/european-commission-seeks-more-humane-treatment-slaughterhouses-268693

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EU wants welfare officers in slaughterhouses



Slaughterhouses throughout the EU could be obliged to appoint special officers for animal welfare who are to ensure that pigs, sheep, goats, cattle and poultry are humanely treated at the time of their killing, according to European Commission proposals unveiled on Thursday (18 October).



If approved by all 27 member states, the European Commission's proposal will "integrate welfare considerations into the design of slaughterhouses," requiring the killing techniques to be constantly monitored.




A cow restrained for stunning ahead of slaughter



Abattoirs will have to appoint a specific person responsible for animal welfare and ensure that their staff are properly trained and certified, although. Small slaughterhouses will be exempt from this requirement.



Every year, nearly 360 million pigs, sheep, goats and cattle as well as several billion chickens are killed in EU slaughterhouses for their meat. The EC proposal will also apply to the about 25 million animals killed for their fur.



"As a society we have a duty of care towards animals, which includes minimising distress and avoiding pain throughout the slaughtering process," EU health commissioner Androulla Vassiliou said.



"The current EU rules are outdated and need revision. This proposal will make a real difference to the way animals are treated at the time of slaughter, as well as promoting innovation and providing a level playing field for operators," she added.



Animal rights groups hailed the commission proposal.



Eurogroup for Animals spokesperson Steven Blaakman told EUobserver: "The commission made no mention of religious slaughter," pointing out that some countries such as France allow exceptions on religious grounds from having to stun an animal before it is killed. "There, a large amount of sheep meat comes from animals killed via religious slaughter," Mr Blaakman said, while Sweden permits no exceptions on religious grounds.



Enforcing the regulations in the new member states may be difficult however. Romania maintains a strong tradition of slaughtering pigs for Christmas in one's own back yard instead of at slaughterhouses.

 

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Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Labor Vs Industrialist

 Dalit-Online 

Weekly e news paper 

Editor: Nagaraja.M.R.. Vol.16.....Issue. 82................29/11/2020 




Crushing Labor Laws

- Why  NOT  corporate accountability ?

 

Crushing Labour Laws Amidst Successive Industrial Accidents Is Serious Insult to Injury

State governments have undertaken a slew of labour law reforms that could lead to higher exposure to occupational health and safety risks and no appropriate protection for workers.

- Rahul Suresh Sapkal


Industrial accidents are far too common in India.

Two disastrous incidences of gas leakage at Visakhapatnam’s LG Polymers plant and a boiler blast at NCL India Limited’s thermal power station in Tamil Nadu evoked memories of several unfortunate industrial accidents that have taken hundreds of workers lives.

In last year, few reported industrial incidents such an explosion in a chemical factory in Maharashtra, a massive fire at the ONGC plant at Bombay High, a blast in NTPC’s Rae Bareli plant and Bawana industrial area in Delhi, attest to the fact that India’s industrial preventive measures and the safety inspection systems are inadequate and ineffective in ensuring the workers’ safety.

Even if it is just the industrial accidental tragedy with the significant toll that makes the headlines, its actual impact for making comprehensive occupational health and safety legislation seems to be a far-off prospect. In the time of a health crisis, the government adopted stringent measures not only to restrict the movement of people but also enforced a total shutdown of industrial factories – except those units producing essential commodities – and other working establishments to ensure physical distancing.

With this policy, India may be able to contain the virus; however, it could be a staggering task for the state to avert potential industrial accidents due to 42 days of a complete shutdown of factories and their operations that use synthetic inflammable substances and hazardous chemicals. For ensuring smooth production, the manufacturing units need to undertake routine maintenance tasks and those must be inspected by the Directorate General Factory Advice Service periodically.

However, owing to the higher overhead repairing costs, it is observed that Indian employers pay more attention to corrective maintenance (i.e. replacement of machinery when the complete breakdown occurs) relative to preventive maintenance where scheduled maintenance of machines and equipment is undertaken at regular intervals to avoid breakdowns.

Also read: Longer Working Hours, Employee Productivity and the COVID-19 Economic Slump

So in order to minimise the recurring costs, employers are engaging in risky behaviour by allowing workers to work in hazardous conditions. Therefore, on one hand, employers are reluctant to incur preventive maintenance costs to avoid additional overhead. On the other, the Indian labour administration is under tremendous pressure from the government’s pro-employer policies that are offering leeway to employers from regulatory controls.

In this case, neither the employers nor employees would be better off, as it will promote unhealthy competition among Indian firms and would eventually thrust out around 19.5 million of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises from the product market.

Labyrinth of India’s labour legislations 

The principle legislation of the Factories Act of 1948 ( the Act) governs the working conditions and safety measures for registered factory workers. Despite its vast volume, the existing legislation is applicable only to factories that employ ten or more workers; it covers only a small proportion of workers.

According to the Sixth Economic Census, 97.39 million (45%) work in establishments without any hired worker; whereas, 118 million (55%) of workers works in establishments with at least one hired worker. Broadly, the former category falls under the Shops and Establishment Act and later with the Factories Act.

Across the employment threshold sizes, 172 millions of workers (79.85%) works in the establishments that have less than nine workers and 20.1 million are employed in establishments which have more than 10 and less than 49 workers. Only 17.60 million (8%) work in establishments with more than 100 workers.


A migrant worker rides a cart with his family on a highway as they return to their villages, during a 21-day nationwide lockdown to limit the spreading of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Ghaziabad, on the outskirts of New Delhi, March 27, 2020. Photo: Reuters/Adnan Abidi/Files

As per the annual report of Directorate General Factory Advice Service, there are 31,602 factory units are registered under the hazardous industry category employing 1.97 million workers in 2013, which increased to 32,956 units employing 2.32 million in 2014 u/s 2(CB) of Factories Act, 1948. Due to its constricting legislative approach, 169.3 millions of workers who legally may not be working in the scheduled hazardous industries but are engaged in the hazardous process are absolutely excluded from the purview of occupational safety and health laws due to the employee threshold criteria of the Act.

Also read: Adityanath Govt in UP to Suspend Key Labour Laws, Workers’ Rights for Three Years

Industrial accidents and prevalence of fatality risk

The prevalence of industrial accidental deaths is notably high in the manufacturing industries. It will have a multiplier effect in exacerbating the risk when it is accompanied by the prolonged dysfunctional manufacturing processes and inadequate staff during the lockdown period.

Data from the Ministry of Labour and Employment also reveals that 3,562 workers lost their lives and around 51,124 were injured in factory accidents between 2014-16. These figures may have increased; however, the official statistics are yet to be updated for the last two years. According to the official figures of labour bureau the fatal accidental incidental rate per 1,000 workers was 0.53% (fatal) in 2013 which increased to 0.63% in 2014 for the factories registered under the Factories Act of 1948.

Similarly, the frequency rate for fatal accidents per lakh worker was 0.30% (in 2013) that increased to 0.43% point in 2014. Despite the increasing manufacturing and mining activities, regulatory authorities ensuring occupational safety have been limited to 1,400 safety officers, 1,154 factory inspectors, and 27 medical inspectors for the central sphere across all states. Therefore, the health hazard and fatality risk of working in Indian factories have increased tremendously and it could likely to continue unless a routine inspection and mandatory safety clearance are enforced effectively.

Turing a blind eyes

An uncertainly of livelihood, wage loss and layoffs would likely to linger much longer and will be persisted in the post-lockdown period. In these difficult times, many state governments have undertaken a slew of labour law reforms that potentially lead to higher exposure to occupational health and safety risks, no appropriate protection, and an increased likelihood that they will suffer from illness, accident or death.

For instance, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, Maharashtra, and Uttar Pradesh have amended the Factories Act that allows firms to extend a factory worker’s daily shift to 12 hours per day, from the existing eight hours per day to revive the economy. Excessive working hours have negative effects on workers’ health which leads to poor immunity and exposes them to a higher risk of industrial accidents.

Also read: Labour Law Reform: Was a Sledgehammer Needed When Employment Itself Is Uncertain?

Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh took a frog’s leap to exempts all from labour legislation for the next three years as a measure to revive the economy. This reform may further give reason to employers to circumvent essential labour laws but will cause them severe productivity losses. In a bid to accelerate the economic recovery, the state is externalising the cost of reform onto workers by waning out its own enforcement mechanism.

India’s efforts in encouraging occupational and industrial safety remain frail. The proposed Code in the de jure spirit obliges employers to provide for a risk-free workplace and instruct employees on safety protocol. It further assumes that all employers will self-enforce these Codes without any deterrence from enforcement authorities.

Existing evidence shows that if we allow self-enforcement of labour laws though nudging the behaviour of employers, then employers would likely engage in an opportunistic rent-seeking behaviour to maximize their own self-interests of profit. Hence, the behavioural altruism on the part of employers offers less credence in safeguarding the rights of workers.

Second, the labour inspectorate is entrusted with the power to inquire into accidents and conduct inspections and to frame penalties – both civil and criminal – on employers in case of non-adherence. However, in the proposed Code, the statutory powers of labour administration have been curtailed severely. It will be considered as inspector-cum-facilitators who initiate the legal proceedings but will not able to frame criminal penalties on employers.

Instead of protecting the workers, it is now redefined to protect the interest of employers. The code also restricts the appeal of a person aggrieved due to industrial accidents or industries or any employment-related causes thereof is to file a writ petition before the relevant high court. This may lead to the denial of access to justice to challenge issues before a lower court. As a result, there will be longer pendency of labour disputes and delayed justice to the aggrieved workers.

India’s jump from 130th (2016) to 63rd (2019) rank in the Ease of Doing Business (EDB) is boasted across all industries. Every year, whenever India tops the higher rank on EDB, our global ranking point estimate slips towards the bottom quartile in all global parameters such as hunger, peace, slavery, worst formed labour and workers’ rights indexes on the lowest scale.

To soothe the Centre, all states government are now engaged in a race to bottom to reform existing labour market institutions to encourage ease of doing business and to promote flexibility. Hence, the two unfortunate disastrous incidents that recently took place have propelled us to reimagine the future of Indian workers and industrial relation systems in the neoliberal order and the pandemic





Government Should Ask Private Sector to Work as Not-for-Profit for Three Years


Instead of making India's workers sacrifice their rights, the economic crisis caused by the coronavirus and lockdown is best tackled by temporarily turning businesses into trusts and limiting salary differentials.


Arundhati Dhuru and Sandeep Pandey


All the claims and narratives of a progressing nation – Rajiv Gandhi’s ‘marching into the 21st century,’ Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s ‘India Shining,’ A.P.J. Abdul Kalam’s ‘providing urban amenities in rural areas,’ Manmohan Singh’s achievement of 8-9% GDP growth rates and Narendra Modi’s ‘smart cities’ – have crumbled in the wake of the national level migrant workers’ crisis during the coronavirus lockdown.

The phenomenon of lakhs of workers marching, cycling or hitchhiking home hundreds of kilometres away has not been seen anywhere else in the world either because nowhere do people migrate in such large numbers for jobs or because other governments took care of their workers better than in India.

How shameful that a country desiring to be a global economic and military power doesn’t have the wherewithal or the political will to take care of its poor. When the poor needed succour most, they were simply abandoned. Inspite of the Constitution of India being formally guided by the concept of ‘socialism’, this tragedy has also highlighted the discriminatory treatment by government on the basis of class, and by extension caste, as the categories of class and caste in India more or less overlap. While free transportation was arranged for children of the moneyed class, the poor, even if they managed to get onto a train or a bus, were made to pay – because of which, in some cases, they abandoned the idea of travel.

Opening up the sale of liquor on May 4, 2020, effectively made a mockery of the lockdown when the police gave up attempts to prevent people from gathering in crowds. The people who lined up in front of liquor shops were the poor, not the rich – just as it was the poor who  queued up outside banks during demonetisation. Hence the government not only deliberately allowed the poor to risk their health by assembling in this way but also took away from them whatever little cash they had which could have been spent on buying food or healthcare for their families.


To add insult to injury, workers are now expected to give up their basic rights. A number of state governments have suspended various labour laws to varying degrees for different time periods. Uttar Pradesh has suspended all but five labour laws for three years and in Gujarat, workers will be made to work for extra hours but not paid adequately for that. May Day is celebrated as labour rights day around the world because it was on May 1 in 1886 that American workers in Chicago resolved not to work for more than eight hours a day. But the Himachal Pradesh, Rajasthan, Punjab, Gujarat, Uttarakhand, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh and UP governments have shown scant regard for this hard won right and issued ordinances which may not stand the scrutiny of law even if they are passed by their respective legislative assemblies. When the Uttar Pradesh Workers’ Front approached the high court with a public interest litigation, the government quietly withdrew its May 8 order permitting 12 hours of work per day and 72 hours per week without additional payment for overtime, before the next hearing date.

The prime minister views all the discomfort borne by workers as a sacrifice for the nation. He has chosen the most exploited class of society for inflicting sacrifices which they are indeed making by losing their jobs and incomes, dying in accidents on roads or railway tracks while going back home or simply going through the excruciating experience of walking for hundreds of kilometres with all their belongings and without any guarantee of food or water. In some cases, families with children have made this arduous journey. It is a matter of national shame that our workers are subjected to this humiliating treatment.

If workers can make sacrifices why not others, especially the business class, which anyway has surplus accumulated income? If workers are expected to give up the guarantees of working hours and minimum wages, why don’t we ask industrialists to work without profit for the next three years? All private companies could be converted to trusts with a board of trustees replacing the board of directors and a managing trustee replacing the owner.

Everybody working for the company could be paid salaries decent enough for survival. After all, isn’t that what we are expecting from the workers? This is precisely the advice Mahatma Gandhi had for owners of big businesses. He suggested that they must consider themselves as trustees of all the assets controlled by them meant for common good of human society. Hence, everybody could get a salary according to their skill but it would be desirable to follow the principle laid down by another important political thinker of the country, Ram Manohar Lohia – that the difference between the incomes of the poorest and richest should not be more than ten times.

If this standard is adopted by all organisations and governments, India will be able to deal with the setback to its economy due to the lockdown in an effective manner. If the minimum daily wages under Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act is Rs. 202 in UP, then the maximum salary anybody should draw in government or private sector in UP should not exceed Rs. 2020 per day or Rs. 60,600 in a month.

Any profit above total expenditure of private companies for the next three years  should go to the government treasury and the government could waive income tax for this duration. If the National Food Security Act extends its coverage universally and education, health care, transport, communication systems and banks are all run as trusts rather than for-profit enterprises,  then there is no reason why any family should be unable to meet all its expenses.

Free education and free heath care is a policy followed by many countries successfully. Giving priority to public transport over private motorised vehicles is another such sound policy. If people with an inclination for service, as we witnessed a number of them during relief work, were to take up service sector positions and work on an honorary basis or for a minimum salary, governance could really improve and corruption could be brought under check. Hence, by a wise selection of policy measures the cost of living can be brought down. In the coronavirus lockdown almost everybody was down to fulfilling only their basic needs, giving up most of the comforts and facilities of modern living. What was forced upon us could slowly become a subject of voluntary acceptance.

Unless such austerity measures are followed we may not be able to recover from the crisis we’re in.


Editorial  :  Sacrifice by not workers alone  Entrepreneurs  too a must


Entrepreneurs,  Industrialists  enjoy various benefits from government  during good times, at the expense of tax payer. Now during  economic downslide  too e joying benefits from goverment  at the cost of poor tax payers. On top of it  there are few industrialists swindling banks , public to the tune of crores of rupees and government  goes an extra mile to waive off those NPAs.  What is the contribution  of these industrialists to the nation apart from their selfish goal of  making profits. 


Industrialists  only want  flexible labor laws, easy licensing 

 System, above all  easy money from banks / share market. Fine. Why NOT  Corporate  Governance  Laws, Share holder accountability, Environmental  accountability ?

It is workers who always sacrifice to nation building but suffer the most. Who are anti nationals – Workers , Industrialists or Public Servants  ?




Edited, printed , published owned by NAGARAJA.M.R. @  # LIG-2   No  761, HUDCO  FIRST  STAGE , OPP WATER WORKS , LAXMIKANTANAGAR , HEBBAL

,MYSURU – 570017  KARNATAKA  INDIA     Cell : 91 8970318202

  WhatsApp  91  8970318202


Home page :

http://eclarionofdalit.dalitonline.in       

https://dalit-online.blogspot.com      


Contact  :  editor@dalitonline.in   ,

 editor.dalitonline@gmail.com   


Monday, November 16, 2020

Judge's Bias - 3

 Dalit-Online 

Weekly e news paper 

Editor: Nagaraja.M.R.. Vol.16.....Issue. 81................22/11/2020 



Editorial : Bias  Double Standards of  Supreme court Judges 


When a person is influential , well connected like Arnab Goswami  bail is given by SCI in a matter of few hours but commoners has to languish  in jail for  years. If person happens to be influential  industrialist like Adani  case is taken up even during court vacation, if commoner he has to wait for years. If person happens to be super rich like Ambani  crores of rupees dues will be deferred , instalment  facility for years is extended  if  a commoner in same scenario  doesn't pay dues court confiscates his personal property,  defaulter is put behind bars.  When  influential  persons land in trouble judges / police take suo motto action to rescue them, whereas when a commoner appeals ,  complains  to police , supreme court  specifically requesting  for justice , protection to life no appropriate  action taken. In each step of  SCI judges there is bias in favor of rich / influential.

SCI Judges  use “ CONTEMPT  punishing powers “ as a weapon to silence  persons  seeking  accountability  of judges. There is also bias , double standards by SCI Judges  just compare Advocate Nedumpara , Justice Karnan with Advocate Prashanth Bhushan.  Second  compare. AP Chief Minister Jagan Reddy with TV comedian  Kunal Kamra. 

Judges & Police lack professionalism. SHAME  SHAME  JUDGES & POLICE.




Will apex court protect liberty for all citizens?


The administering of justice should never be selective, or so lacking in humanity that it revolts the human conscience.


The Supreme Court of India upheld the principle of personal liberty by granting interim bail to Republic TV’s chief Arnab Goswami in a 2018 case where he is accused of abetment of suicide. This is a good thing. There are some who do not like Goswami’s views, or the abusive felicity with which he name-calls and verbally humiliates his ideological “opponents” or demeans those whom he does not like. However, anyone’s personal likes and dislikes are not material to the protection of his or her constitutional rights. If his personal liberty has been unfairly violated, and he deserves to get bail, he should not be arbitrarily kept in prison by the law enforcement machinery of a state government with which he is at loggerheads.

It was heartening for citizens to hear the clarion call of Justice D.Y. Chandrachud: “If we as a constitutional court do not lay down the law and protect liberty, then who will?” The message was clear. The highest court in the land will intervene to protect personal liberty at any cost, list a case of this nature with lightning speed, overrule the standard judicial procedures like first pursuing a bail petition before the designated lower court, and hear the petition even if means working on the weekend. This is also a good thing.    

However, such heartening news may not have bought much hope to Father Stan Swamy, who is languishing in Taloja jail in Navi Mumbai.  The 83-year-old tribal rights activist has been incarcerated since January 2018 for his alleged Maoist links in the Elgar Parishad case. On November 6 this year, Swamy moved a petition before the National Investigation Agency special court in which he asked for a straw or a sipper cup in jail. “I cannot hold a glass as my hands are unsteady due to Parkinson’s (disease)”, his petition said. He was asking not for big things like personal liberty and freedom. His only request was for a sipper cup or a paper straw so that he could drink water without spilling.  A straw or a sipper are not dangerous items, nor are they luxury items which prisoners should not have. But that request does symbolise some things as important as personal liberty, which the Supreme Court so vigilantly defended. It symbolises a human being’s legitimate craving for dignity;  of his supplication for compassion; of his expectation of humane treatment; of his hope in a caring system for those in deep medical distress. The special court judge who heard this desperate petition simply asked the NIA to file its reply on the matter on November 26. 

For 20 days Father Stan Swamy will continue to wait with his trembling hands for a straw or a sipper to be provided to him. The NIA will get twenty days to consider whether such a request should be conceded to.  And there is no guarantee that when it does file its reply on November 26, it would accede to the request. The legal position in the matter may require further deliberation. The rules need to be checked out for “dangerous” prisoners. If these don’t provide for a straw to be given to prisoners, how can an exception be made? After all a sipper, that would enable an 83-year-old prisoner suffering from advanced Parkinson’s disease to take a sip of water, could sabotage the interests of the state. 

Perhaps the honourable Supreme Court could take suo motu cognisance of such matters as well. Travesty of justice has many forms. In some cases, the rule book is thrown at those deprived of personal liberty, who languish in prison for months without bail. In others, matters are fast tracked at incredible speed, and the judiciary makes public its unwavering commitment to protect personal liberty. Perhaps, the highest court of the land will also then take steps to ensure that the personal liberty of people like the octogenarian Varavara Rao, who has been repeatedly denied bail, and not given permission to be admitted to hospital. The 80-year-old poet, teacher and activist, who has been in jail without trial since 2018, again for alleged Maoist links in the Elgar Parishad case, “was found lying on a soiled bed soaked in urine with no one to attend to him”. His health is extremely precarious; he has suffered deliriums in jail, where he also contracted the Covid-19 virus. Perhaps the Supreme Court may also ask its judicial subordinates why bail in the case of a pregnant Safoora Zargar, arrested for participating in the protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act, took as much as 70 days to be processed.

The nation looks upon the Supreme Court, and the judiciary in general, as an agency of the last resort to get justice. When the Supreme Court declares that it will intervene proactively to ensure personal liberty, it raises, in the thousands of prisoners who are for untenable and inhumane reasons being denied personal liberty, the possibility of hope.  Surely, the Government of India is not so vulnerable that it treats people above the age of 80 who are nearly disabled, as “enemies” who can destabilise the State. The administering of justice should never be selective, or so lacking in humanity that it revolts the human conscience. When Father Stan Swamy is given the freedom to drink water with a semblance of dignity, we will believe that the Supreme Court’s concern for Arnab Goswami has a larger meaning and a message for the conduct of the judiciary as a whole.


Edited, printed , published owned by NAGARAJA.M.R. @  # LIG-2   No  761, HUDCO  FIRST  STAGE , OPP WATER WORKS , LAXMIKANTANAGAR , HEBBAL

,MYSURU – 570017  KARNATAKA  INDIA     Cell : 91 8970318202

  WhatsApp  91  8970318202


Home page :

http://eclarionofdalit.dalitonline.in      

https://dalit-online.blogspot.com      


Contact  :  editor@dalitonline.in  ,

 editor.dalitonline@gmail.com  


 



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Judge's Bias- 2

 Dalit-Online 

Weekly e news paper 

Editor: Nagaraja.M.R.. Vol.16.....Issue. 80................15/11/2020 


Editorial : Bias  Double Standards of  Supreme court Judges 


When a person is influential , well connected like Arnab Goswami  bail is given by SCI in a matter of few hours but commoners has to languish  in jail for  years. If person happens to be influential  industrialist like Adani  case is taken up even during court vacation, if commoner he has to wait for years. If person happens to be super rich like Ambani  crores of rupees dues will be deferred , instalment  facility for years is extended  if  a commoner in same scenario  doesn't pay dues court confiscates his personal property,  defaulter is put behind bars.  When  influential  persons land in trouble judges / police take suo motto action to rescue them, whereas when a commoner appeals ,  complains  to police , supreme court  specifically requesting  for justice , protection to life no appropriate  action taken. In each step of  SCI judges there is bias in favor of rich / influential.

SCI Judges  use “ CONTEMPT  punishing powers “ as a weapon to silence  persons  seeking  accountability  of judges. There is also bias , double standards by SCI Judges  just compare Advocate Nedumpara , Justice Karnan with Advocate Prashanth Bhushan.  Second  compare. AP Chief Minister Jagan Reddy with TV comedian  Kunal Kamra. 

Judges & Police lack professionalism. SHAME  SHAME  JUDGES & POLICE.



Is Jagan's  Letter CONTEMPT OF COURT ?


https://www.google.com/amp/s/indianexpress.com/article/india/plea-in-sc-seeks-action-against-jagan-over-letter-to-cji-6722748/lite/ 


The Shaky Scales of Fairness in Contempt Cases of Justice Karnan and Prashant Bhushan

By  Kailash Jeenger


Why was Bhushan given repeated opportunities to apologise while a written apology from Justice Karnan was casually brushed aside? Why did the sentences given to both men differ so drastically? Why was civil society vocal in only one matter?


In the recent contempt case against Prashant Bhushan, the way events took shape within and outside the corridors of the Supreme Court was unprecedented. This inevitably reminds us of the contempt case against Justice C.S. Karnan, then a sitting judge of the Calcutta high court. While there were some similarities in the apex court’s approach, certain sections of the Karnan judgment went unnoticed at the time and highlight the difference in approach in the two cases can now be seen.


Let us begin with the similarities, which do the apex court no credit.

At the very initial stage of the contempt proceedings, Justice Karnan addressed a letter to the Registrar General of the Supreme Court on February 10, 2017, requesting that the proceedings begin after the retirement of the then Chief Justice of India, Justice J. S. Khehar, because Justice Karnan had levelled charges of corruption against him (para 18). However, the CJI continued to preside over the bench.


A similar refusal followed Prashant Bhushan’s request that Justice Arun Misra recuse himself from the bench hearing the contempt case.

In both cases, the natural justice principle that no one can be judge in his own cause was ignored. Section 15 of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 authorising suo motu contempt proceedings also weakens this principle, as in such proceedings the victim, the complainant and the adjudicator is the Supreme Court itself.


If the principle of nemo judex in sua causa was violated in both Bhushan and Justice Karnan’s cases, the latter had to put up with several other anomalies.

Justice Karnan’s apology ignored

First, in a hearing on March 31, 2017 Justice Karnan handed over a signed statement wherein he clearly stated:

“I unconditionally withdraw my complaint dated 23.1.2017 against 20 Hon’ble Judges. … I unconditionally tender an apology before this Court if I committed contempt of Court. I will follow Your Lordship’s advice and guidelines in future in order to maintain the judicial system and its integrity. I will be retiring on 11.6.2017, therefore, I make a deep request to permit me to retire from the Bench with the blessings of all brother and sister Judges of the Calcutta High Court. Hence, I pray Your Lordships to restore my judicial and administrative work and thus render justice and oblige.”

Despite this, the court passed the following order dated March 31 after the hearing:

“… He was repeatedly asked, whether he affirms the contents of the letters, written by him, as are available on the record of the case. He was also asked whether he would like to withdraw the allegations. … He has not responded, in any affirmative manner, one way or the other. We would therefore proceed with the matter only after receipt of his written response. …” (para 27)

Thus, the order did not even refer to the written statement Justice Karnan had submitted. Later, in the final judgment dated May 9, the court explained that he was asked to submit a written response on March 31 because of an inconsistency in his oral and written statements made that day. However, the court’s observation does not explain the context of such reiteration.

Gratuitous reference to ‘mental state’

Second, on the date of next hearing (May 1, 2017), Justice Karnan did not appear in person. That day, the court ordered medical examination to test his mental fitness on the following ground:

“The tenor of the press briefings, as also, the purported judicial orders passed by Shri Justice C.S. Karnan, prima facie suggest, that he may not be in a fit medical condition, to defend himself, in the present proceedings.”

The medical report was to be submitted “on or before May 8”.


However, in the final judgment dated May 9, the bench stated that on May 1, the medical examination was ordered because of the inconsistency in his oral and written statements made during the hearing on March 31. Irrespective of the (inconsistent) justifications put forward by the court, the order of a medical test was primarily meant to undermine the credibility of Justice Karnan’s statements by creating the impression that he is not of sound mind. A day after the order, a psychiatrist wrote an article titled: “Milords, There’s a Difference Between Unsound Mind, Mental Illness and ‘Bad’ Behaviour.” Indeed.

More shocking was the following part of the order dated May 1:

“Shri Justice C.S. Karnan may, if he is so advised, furnish his response to the notice issued to him on 8.2.2017, in the meantime. In case he does not choose to file a response on or before 8.5.2017, it shall be presumed, that he has nothing to say in the matter.”

Notably, the deadline assigned to Justice Karnan and the medical board was the same – May 8, 2017. This raises certain glaring questions. How could the court ask a person whose mental state it had just questioned to file a reply? Why was the court prepared to rely upon such a response before satisfying itself as to his mental fitness? How could the court compel such a person to submit a reply by articulating the presumption?

On one hand, the court ordered his medical examination to ensure that he was able to defend himself, while on the other, the court sought a reply from him in his defence before satisfying itself as to his mental condition to defend himself. This raises the obvious question: Was the court even serious about his mental state?

After interacting with Justice Karnan, the team of doctors was satisfied with his sound mental state and, therefore, reported that medical examination was not necessary (para 28).

The role of ‘evidence’

Third, the court recorded in its final judgment that: “None of the allegations levelled by Justice Karnan were supported by any material.”

At the outset, this observation has nothing to do with contempt proceedings because they do not look for justification of the statements. On the other hand, Justice Karnan repeatedly stated in his letters reproduced in the judgment that he has furnished sufficient proof (para 17) or that material evidence was available in the Registry of the Madras high court (paras 8, 11, 24). Furthermore, the issue of inadequate representation of backward classes and minorities in the higher judiciary, as he raised, is obvious.

No one rupee fine but sentenced to maximum penalty

Fourth, at the conclusion of the proceedings advocate, K.K. Venugopal informed the court that Justice Karnan would retire in the next month and, therefore, urged that the image of the institution would be tarnished in case he was punished for contempt of court whilst he is holding the high constitutional office (para 32). However, the bench sentenced him before he demitted his office, with the maximum punishment that may be awarded under the Act –  imprisonment for six months. Justice Karnan became the first judge in Indian history to retire while in jail, on June 11, 2017. The court also passed a press gag order, that is “no further statements made by him should be published hereafter” .

Why did the bench behave unfairly towards Justice Karnan? The gravity of an alleged offence does not permit such deviations.


Absence of civil society support

In respect of Prashant Bhushan’s contempt proceedings before the Supreme Court, advocate Dushyant Dave has highlighted ‘breach of procedure’ in his article, and thus that need no repetition. The court found Bhushan guilty of scandalising the court (criminal contempt) on August 14 and fixed the sentencing hearing on August 20. Within a couple of days, hundreds of people including ex-judges, lawyers and activists signed a statement and wrote on social media platforms extending him solidarity and support.

However, Justice Karnan did not find any such support. Advocate Ram Jethmalani compared his actions with that of a lunatic, about two months before the Supreme Court ordered his medical test. Bhushan, a lawyer-cum-civil rights activist, appreciated the Supreme Court’s judgment sentencing Justice Karnan. True, the alleged actions of Justice Karnan and Bhushan were very different in terms of their manner and time span, however, the concerns Justice Karnan raised were more serious, wider and fundamental, and deserve to be endorsed by civil society. Indeed, resistance has its own geography, elitism and caste. Justice Karnan comes from Tamil Nadu and belongs to a Scheduled Caste.

On August 20, Bhushan refused to apologise before the three-judge bench. Despite his firm denial, the bench unprecedentedly demonstrated some leniency. Instead of deciding on the question of sentence, it allowed him four days more to reconsider his position and tender an unconditional apology, though he did not do so. Even on the following day, the bench, instead of sentencing him, insisted on an apology but in vain. Ultimately, the court punished him with a fine of Re 1.

On the other hand, in Justice Karnan’s case the Supreme Court, on the dubious ground of ‘inconsistency’ –  refused to accept his written statement in which he tendered an unconditional apology and withdrew the allegations of corruption against fellow judges. And he was punished with the maximum sentence provided for under the Act.

In both Bhushan and Karnan cases, court brought disrepute to self

According to the apex court, the remarks and actions of Justice Karnan and Bhushan brought disrepute to the judiciary and violated the law; their trial by the bench in the aforesaid manner, however, did no less.

One of the Supreme Court’s own precedents says:

“What, however, applies to a proceeding of contempt of court are the principles of natural justice and those principles apply to the contempt proceeding with greater rigour than any other proceeding. This means that the Court must follow a procedure that is fair and objective; that should cause no prejudice to the person facing the charge of contempt of court and that should allow him/her the fullest opportunity to defend himself/herself.” (para 82)

The criminal contempt cases against Justice Karnan and Prashant Bhushan offer an opportunity of introspection to the judiciary and the political executive too. The concerns raised about the judiciary not doing enough to safeguard the constitution and democracy, about corruption and inadequate representation of women, SCs, STs, OBCs and minorities in the higher judiciary, and about the unfair treatment of a Dalit judge by fellow judges are genuine. And if left unaddressed, will be harmful to the image of the judiciary.

Contempt proceedings against such whistleblowers and victims often mask the serious issues raised. In this way, the contempt law tends to obstruct resistance. At the same time, contempt law also becomes an effective tool of oppression in the hands of a political executive intending to dominate the judiciary.


Legal Notice to Honourable Chief Justice of India , 

Honourable  Chairman  National Human  Rights commission  New Delhi. 

 

To, 

Honourable Chief Justice of India, 

SUPREME COURT OF INDIA, New Delhi. 

 

Honourable Sir , 

 

Subject : Legal Notice to Chief Justice of India 

Ref : SUO MOTU CONTEMPT PETITION (CRL.) NO.1 OF 2020 

 

Are not Judge's  liable for Contempt of  Citizens of India ? 

Are Judges , Police PERFECT ? Satya Harishchandra ? 

 

Few  Corrupt Judges in fact deserve utter contempt and must be ousted from their office. 

In the above mentioned case , SCI  is trying  to silence the voice of advocate Prashanth Bhushan seeking justice , accountability of judges. In the past SCI has silenced voices seeking justice , accountability of judges in various ways -  silenced voices of Advocate Nedumpara , Justice Karnan , Justice Rakesh Kumar , Justice Jayant Patel , Justice Prabhakar Gwal and others. 

We  legally,  rightfully stand  with  Advocate Prashanth  bhushan  and fully  support the issues of JUDICIAL  ACCOUNTABILITY  raised by him since years. 

 

         Hereby , I challenge Chief Justice of India in the exercise of my FUNDAMENTAL DUTIES as a citizen of india , that subject to conditions I will legally prove the crimes of few judges , police , public servants within the government service and other criminals. Is the CJI ready to book those criminals , traitors , anti nationals ? 

 

Since 25 years I am appealing to apex court for justice concerning various public issues , no justice in sight but injustices meted out one after another. 

But the same judges are SHAMELESSLY taking huge pay perks for years. Parasites feeding on Indian Public. Whenever questions of accountability are asked judges level contempt charges against the questioner or police fix him in fake cases or he is silenced by threats , murders , denial of jobs , etc. Since 25 years in many ways they are trying to silence me. Just take the recent example of Justice Karnan who leveled  corruption charges against specific judges with CJI. Instead of conducting a fair investigation into the matter , CJI tried to silence him by serving him contempt notice. 

Take very recent example of   complaint by woman staff  of 

Supreme  Court  of  India    against  CJI  Ranjan Gogoi  involving  sexual harassment  charges. Instead of  registering complaint 

against  CJI  and  conducting fair transparent investigations,  trial ,  everything was covered up in a super fast manner. Complainant and her family were victimized. Delhi police who exhibit their strength before commoners , innocents became weak , meek , big zeroes before gogoi. Shame shame. 

 

 Our Judges , Police are NOT Perfect Not Satya Harischandras . There are criminals as well as honest people side by side in judiciary & police. We whole heartedly respect honest few in judiciary , police & public service. But we detest corrupt judges , corrupt police. Honest Judges & Police are not coming into open to prosecute their corrupt colleagues, why ? silenced ? 

 

Criminalization of all wings of government has taken place , unfit people are in the positions of power. Corruption in judiciary , police , CBI , CVC , Public service is rampant. Now MAFIA is at work. Only few scandals , scams become public , many are buried. If one criminal public servant is caught other public servant who is also a criminal conducts name sake investigation , gives report , clean chit. Law courts rely on the government reports as evidences , courts are not bothered about credibility of reports or investigations. It is quid pro quo. Therefore technically criminal public servants are never proved for their crimes & convicted , as investigation itself is not fair. 

 

A Crime may happen without the knowledge of police but cann’t continue for years without the connivance of police. A Crime reported to court cann’t continue for years without connivance of judges. 

 

At the bottom of the paper , I have given web sites about few ACB raids on government officials and unearthing of crores worth property. How they have earned it , by misusing their official positions. Therefore government reports , records prepared by these officials , investigations conducted by corrupt police are suspect. But Law courts in various cases , considers government reports , records , statements of government officials as sacrosanct . Therefore in many cases injustice is meted out by court , as they depend on reports of corrupt government officials , corrupt police. 

The public servants & the government must be role models in law abiding acts , for others to emulate & follow. if a student makes a mistake it is excusable & can be corrected by the teacher. if the teacher himself makes a mistake , all his students will do the same mistake. if a thief steals , he can be caught , legally punished & reformed . if a police himself commits crime , many thieves go scot-free under his patronage. even if a police , public servant commits a crime , he can be legally prosecuted & justice can be sought by the aggrieved. just think , if a judge himself that too of apex court of the land himself commits crime – violations of RTI Act , constitutional rights & human rights of public and obstructs the public from performing their constitutional fundamental duties , what happens ? 

 

“Power will go to the hands of rascals, , rogues and freebooters. All Indian leaders will be of low calibre and men of straw. They will have sweet tongues and silly hearts. They will fight among themselves for power and will be lost in political squabbles . A day would come when even air & water will be taxed.” Sir Winston made this statement in the House of Commons just before the independence of India & Pakistan. Sadly , the forewarning of Late Winston Churchill has been proved right by some of our criminal , corrupt people’s representatives , police , public servants & Judges. 

 

I don’t know whether secretariat staff of CJI office & DARPG / DPG officials are forwarding my appeals for justice , e-mails to you or not. They will be held accountable for their lapses if any. This notice is against the repeated failure of constitutional duties & indirect collusion with criminals by previous CHIEF JUSTICEs OF INDIA. Notice is served against them , to the office of CJI , NOT personally against you. 

 

Please refer my appeal for justice through DARPG ; 

DLGLA/E/2013/00292 

DEPOJ/E/2013/00679 

In india democracy is a farce , freedom a mirage. the most basic freedom RIGHT TO INFORMATION & EXPRESSION , is not honoured by the government,as the information opens up the crimes of V.V.I.Ps & leads to their ill-gotten wealth. The public servants are least bothered about the lives of people or justice to them. these type of fat cats , parasites are a drain on the public exchequer . these people want ,wish me to see dead , wish to see HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH closed . so that, a voice against injustices is silenced forever , the crimes of V.V.I.Ps closed , buried forever. 

To my numerous appeals , HRW’s appeals to you ,you have not yet replied. It clearly shows that you are least bothered about the lives of people or justice to them .it proves that you are hell bent to protect the criminals at any cost. you are just pressurising the police to enquire me ,to take my statement, to repeatedly call me to police station all with a view to silence me.all of you enjoy “legal immunity privileges” ,why don’t you have given powers to the police / investigating officer to summon all of you for enquiry ?or else why don’t all of you are not appearing before the police voluntarily for enquiry ?at the least why don’t all of you are not sending your statement about the case to the police either through legal counsel or through post? you are aiding criminals ,by denying me job oppurtunities in R.B.I CURRENCY NOTE PRESS mysore , city civil court ,bangalore , distict court , mysore ,etc & by illegally closing my newspaper. Even Press accreditation to me as a web journalist is denied till date. there is a gross, total mismatch between your actions and your oath of office. this amounts to public cheating & moral turpitude on your part. 

1.you are making contempt of the very august office you hold. 

2.you are making contempt of the constitution of india. 

3.you are making contempt of citizens of india. 

4.you are sponsoring & aiding terorrism & organized crime. 

5.you are violating the fundamental & human rights of the citizens of india and of neighbouring countries. 

6.you are violating & making contempt of the U.N HUMAN RIGHTS CHARTER to which india is a signatory. 

7.you are obstructing me from performing my fundamental duties as a citizen of india. 

8. As a result of your gross negligence of constitutional duties you have caused me damages / losses to the tune of RUPEES TWO CRORE ONLY. 

9. You are responsible for crime cover ups mentioned in my RTI Appeals , PILs and continuation of those crimes unabated. 

10. You are responsible for denial of information, which vindicates the crimes of powers that be. 

11. You are responsible for physical assaults , murder attempts on me. 

12. You are responsible for job denials to me at NIE , PES Engineering college , RBI Press , Mysore , Bangalore Courts. 

13. You are responsible for my illegal retrenchment from RPG Cables , denial of medical care to me towards occupational health problems. 

14. You are responsible for denying me legal aid. 

15. You are responsible for illegal closure of my news paper. 

16. You are responsible for denial of press accreditation to me as a web journalist till date. 

17. You are responsible for repeatedly passing on my appeals to police. So that they can take statements , close the file under the threat of police power. 

18. You have violated my Human Rights & Fundamental Rights. 

19. In terms of Integrity , Honesty You & other public servants are nowhere near Baba Saheb B R Ambedkar , Mahatma Gandhi & Satya Harishchandra . Many Public servants are UNFIT to be in their posts. 

You are hereby called upon to Pay damages to me and SHOW-CAUSE within 30 days , why you cann’t be legally prosecuted for the above mentioned crimes . If you don’t answer it will be admission of the charges by you. It will amount to confession of crimes on your own. 

If i am repeatedly called to police station or else where for the sake of investigations , the losses i do incurr as a result like loss of wages , transportation , job , etc must be borne by the government. prevoiusly the police / IB personnel repeatedly called me the complainant (sufferer of injustices) to police station for questioning , but never called the guilty culprits even once to police station for questioning , as the culprits are high & mighty . this type of one sided questioning must not be done by police or investigating agencies . if anything untoward happens to me or to my family members like loss of job , meeting with hit & run accidents , loss of lives , etc , the jurisdictional police together with above mentioned accussed public servants , Chief Justice of India & Jurisdictional District Magistrate will be responsible for it. Even if criminal nexus levels fake charges , police file fake cases against me or my dependents to silence me , this complaint is & will be effective. 

if anything untoward happens to me or my dependents , the government of india is liable to pay Rs. TWO crore as compensation to survivors of my family. if my whole family is eliminated by the criminal nexus ,then that compensation money must be donated to Indian Army Welfare Fund. afterwards , the money must be recovered by GOI as land arrears from the salary , pension , property , etc of guilty judges , police officials , public servants & Constitutional fuctionaries. 

 

Thanking you. Jai Hind , Vande Mataram. 

 

Send reply to : 

Nagaraja Mysuru Raghupathi 

Editor ,  DALIT  ONLINE , 

LIG 2 , NO 761 , HUDCO First Stage, 

Laxmikantanagar , Hebbal , Mysuru – 570017. 

 

 

Date : 16.08.2020……………..your’s sincerely, 

Place : Mysuru , India ……….Nagaraja Mysuru Raghupathi 

 

 

Judges & Sex Crimes  

https://dalit-online.blogspot.com/2019/11/judges-sexualharassment.html?m=1   , 

 

Rogue Police  and Judges  

https://dalit-online.blogspot.com/2020/04/rogue-police-judges.html?m=1   , 

 

Notice to Chief Justice of India 

https://sites.google.com/site/sosevoiceforjustice/notice-to-chief-justice   , 

 

Crimes by Khaki 

https://sites.google.com/site/sosevoiceforjustice/crimes-by-khaki ,  

 

FIRST Answer Judges Police 

https://www.scribd.com/document/336585411/FIRST-Answer-Judges-Police   , 

  


Notice  To  Chief  Justice  of  India

https://sites.google.com/site/sosevoiceforjustice/notice-to-chief-justice  


Edited, printed , published owned by NAGARAJA.M.R. @  # LIG-2   No  761, HUDCO  FIRST  STAGE , OPP WATER WORKS , LAXMIKANTANAGAR , HEBBAL

,MYSURU – 570017  KARNATAKA  INDIA     Cell : 91 8970318202

  WhatsApp  91  8970318202


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