Article 48 of the Constitution of India


Article 48 of the Constitution of India is one of the Directive Principles which directs the state to make efforts for banning the Beef consumption, animal slaughtering, Smuggling, and their trading with neighbouring borders. It further states to organise Agriculture and Animal husbandry on modern and scientific lines.

Directive Principles

Article 48 is included as a “Directive Principle of State Policy”, meant to guide the Indian states in policy formation and its implementation, but could not be enforced in any court.
  1. All the states administered by the Government of India shall take measures for preserving improving the breed.
  2. The state administration shall make necessary arrangements in organizing agriculture and animal husbandry on modern and scientific lines.
  3. The state shall endeavour to prohibit slaughtering and smuggling of cows, Calves and other Milch and draught cattle.
  4. The state shall take necessary actions to ban trade of cattles in Livestock market for purposes of slaughter.
  5. The state governments shall be primarily responsible for prevention, detection, registration and investigation of crime intendeding cow slaughter.
  6. The states shall prevent slaughtering of animals except in a recognized and licensed slaughter house.
  7. States shall prohibit slaughtering of pregnant animal or has an offspring less than three months old. Further, the animal which is under the age of three months or has not been certified by a Veterinarian that it is in a fit condition to be used commercially, shall not be slaughtered in a licensed house.

    Purpose

The purpose of the Article 48 of the constitution of India is aimed to prevent the religious sentiments of the Hindu adherents. In view of the persistent demands requested from the related religions, for action to be taken to prevent cattle slaughtering, the government formulated Article 48 for well-being of cattle and to take measures to secure the cattle wealth of India.

Petitions filed

The article 48 was challenged in the Supreme Court of India by Butchers, Tanners, Gut merchants, curers and cattle dealers. The petitions were filed in accordance with fundamentals rights as mandated in ) and religion which were violated by enforcing the Article-48.

Aftermath

Since the Article 48 was implemented, it triggered a series of violence and mob lynching attacks. In the first six months of 2017, 20 cow-terror attacks were reported. The attacks were carried out by Gau Rakshaks against the Muslims involved in beef selling, eating and trading.