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In the areas where the borders of Telangana, Karnataka & Maharashtra meet, cattle markets are a massive business. On paper, these markets exist to help farmers buy & sell cows for milk & farming There are strict laws meant to protect these animals
But if you look closely, the reality is very different. When a cow stops making enough milk, a hidden system of loopholes & trades quickly sends the animal to a backyard butcher. Here is exactly how it happens in simple terms
1. The Secrets of the Government Market :
In official government markets, it is illegal to buy or sell cows for meat. Because of this, neither the seller nor the buyer will ever admit what the cow is actually being used for
They pretend the transaction is just a normal farm sale. But once the paperwork is signed & the cow is loaded onto a truck, it is taken away secretly Instead of going to a proper farm, many of these cows end up in hidden, makeshift butcher yards
2. Fake Medical Papers for Rs 500:
The law says you cannot kill a healthy cow. A cow can usually only be legally slaughtered if it is suffering from a highly contagious or incurable disease
To get around this law, traders use a simple trick. They pay a small bribe often just Rs 500 to a corrupt veterinarian
The vet writes a fake certificate claiming the healthy cow is dangerously sick. With that single piece of paper, killing the cow suddenly becomes legal
3. The Cruel Truth About Dairy & Hormones:
To make as much money as possible, many dairy farms inject their cows with a hormone called oxytocin. This drug forces the cow's body to give more milk than it naturally should
Over time, these painful injections ruin the cow’s health and destroy its ability to have calves. As soon as the cow is completely exhausted and can no longer produce milk, the dairy owner sells it off. Once the animal has been fully exploited, it is sent straight to the butcher.
What is Oxytocin? It is a chemical injection used to force cows to release milk instantly, which ruins their health over time.
4. Trading Cows Like Used Cars :
For a poor farmer, keeping a cow that gives very little milk is a heavy financial burden. To fix this, farmers use cattle traders just like a used-car dealership.
* The farmer gives their low-yielding cow to a trader.
* The farmer pays some extra cash.
* The trader gives the farmer a new, high-yielding milk cow.
The trader is now stuck with the old, low-yielding cow. Since the trader doesn't run a dairy farm, they immediately sell that old cow to a butcher to make a quick profit.
[ Farmer ] ---> Gives Old Cow Cash ---> [ Trader ]
|------------ Gets New Cow ---------------|
[ Trader ] ---> Sells Old Cow ---> [ Butcher ]
5. No Mercy for Young or Low-Yielding Cows :
Dairy farming is an expensive business & farmers do not like to wait.
* Young Cows: If a young female cow (between 1 and 2 years old) does not grow large enough udders, the farmer knows she won't produce much milk in the future. Instead of wasting money feeding her, they sell her to the meat trade early.
* New Mothers: If a cow gives birth to her very first calf but fails to produce a high amount of milk right away, the farmer cuts their losses. Both the mother cow & her newborn calf are sold off to the butcher together
The Border Connection :
Because the borders of Telangana, Karnataka & Maharashtra are so close together, this region has become a major hub for illegal cattle moving.
Different states have different laws. Traders easily move cows across state lines to confuse local police and bypass the law. Every single day, 1000s of old, sick, and young cows are quietly moved through these borders—sold under the pretense of farming, but destined for the slaughterhouse
#Gaumata #SaveCows #CowSmuggling #BeefBan #AntiCowSlaughter