(Representational Image) (Representational Image)

Angry with the crackdown on illegal slaughterhouses in Uttar Pradesh by the new government, meat sellers across the state have decided to go on indefinite strike from Monday. “We have decided to intensify our strike from tomorrow. All shops will remain closed. Fish sellers too have joined us and are extending support to us,” Lucknow Bakra Gosht Vypar Mandal office bearer Mubeen Qureshi said.

Qureshi added that there was no question of the strike being called off anytime soon. “It will go on indefinitely,” he said. In Lucknow, non-vegetarian food outlets, including the famous Tunday and Rahim have shifted to mutton and chicken dishes after buffalo meat became scarce due to the crackdown.

“The meat sellers are piqued over the crackdown on slaughter houses which has adversely hit the livelihood of lakhs of people,” Qureshi said.

Keeping the BJP’s pre-poll promise, new chief minister Yogi Adityanath has ordered closure of illegal slaughterhouses and strict enforcement of the ban on cow smuggling to fulfill a key electoral promise.

Meanwhile, BJP national spokesman Sambit Patra said in Delhi that the government was only following a court order as illegal abattoirs were contributing to UP’s ill health by getting ground water polluted. He claimed those running meat outlets legally and in accordance with norms were not being victimised.

“There has been a court order about illegal abattoirs which was not implemented by the previous government. The state’s Chief Secretary has constituted committees in each district headed by the Collector and comprising ten people each. The committee is visiting every slaughterhouse to see if they are being run legally and submitting a report every day,” he said.

About loss of livelihood and lack of meat in the market, Patra said,” If there is large-scale disruption, the state government will look at it and resolve the issue.

Senior UP Congress leader Akhilesh Pratap Singh said only small meat vendors were being targeted during the drive. “How is it that the small shops are getting closed and meat exports are going up. The government should have made people aware of the laws and rules before launching the drive,” he said.

Chief Minister Aditya Nath Yogi had yesterday said abattoirs operating legally will not be touched but action will be taken against those run illegally. “The government will not touch those (abattoirs) which are operating as per the provisions of law and have a valid licence. But those that are violating the orders of the NGT and playing with the health of the public would not be spared…,” he had said.

(With inputs from PTI)

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