Banning cattle supply to BD will cost India Rs 31,000 cr

What minister Rajnath Singh was not briefed: The Times of India

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UNB, Dhaka :
India would be saddled with an additional expenditure in excess of Rs 31,000 crore annually if the BSF were to implement Home Minister Rajnath Singh’s instructions strictly.
Singh on Wednesday asked BSF jawans to put a stop to cattle smuggling across the Indo-Bangla border and stifle it so severely that people in Bangladesh stop eating beef, reports The Times of India.
This would be the cost of sustaining around 1.25 crore cattle in various gaushalas (cowsheds) annually till they die naturally, said the report.
The figure is four times higher than the allocation made by the government for the nutrition of children under Integrated Child Development Scheme.
Every year, on average, close to 25 lakh cattle are smuggled from India to Bangladesh illegally across the border, the report says.
It is alleged that much of this happens with the connivance of those guarding the border, a charge denied by BSF. However, sources say, the sheer economics of the trade make it near impossible to stop cattle smuggling across Indo-Bangla border.
Processed cattle meat is a multi-million dollar industry in Bangladesh with India as the prime source of cattle.
What, perhaps, the minister was not briefed about by his officials is that a large part of this is not eaten in Bangladesh but exported to Gulf countries. Most Bangladeshis, according to reports in that country’s media, still cannot afford to eat beef regularly and do so only during festivities and other celebrations.
“There’s economic pressure on both sides of the border. While there is massive demand in  
Bangladesh, there is matching supply from India as dairies and independent cattle-rearers can’t afford to feed their animals after they have gone dry.
Then we have friendly relations with Bangladesh and we are not supposed to fire lethal weapons at smugglers unless attacked. In fact, our men carry non-lethal weapons on Bangladesh border. All of this facilitates the illegal trade. Unless a practical solution is found to feed these dry cows, this is unlikely to stop,” said a BSF officer.
That is where the figure of Rs 31,000 crore comes in. The life expectancy of cows in India varies between 15 and 20 years. Dairy industry sources say they generally stop producing milk about five years before their death.
With 25 lakh cattle approaching borders every year, if government puts a complete stop to cattle smuggling it would be saddled with 1.25 crore dry cattle to feed annually. Given that cumulative cost (maintenance of cowshed, payment of salaries to cowherds and feed) of sustaining a dry cow for a year would translate to roughly Rs 25,000, government would have to shell out Rs 31,250 crore annually, say industry sources.
The cost of acquiring land for cowsheds and initial investment in building the infrastructure has to be additionally incurred. Addressing BSF jawans at a border outpost in West Bengal on Wednesday, Singh (as quoted by agencies) said, “I am told the prices of beef in Bangladesh have gone up by 30 percent recently due to heightened vigil by BSF against cattle smuggling. You further intensify your vigil so that the cattle smuggling stops completely and prices of beef in Bangladesh escalates 70pc-80pc more so that people of Bangladesh give up eating beef.”

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