PM’s tough message: killing people in name of cow protection not acceptable

Prime Minister Narendra Modi spinning a charkah during his visit at Sabarmati Ashram in Ahmedabad on Thursday. (UNI)
Prime Minister Narendra Modi spinning a charkah during his visit at Sabarmati Ashram in Ahmedabad on Thursday. (UNI)

AHMEDABAD, June 29: In a tough message against cow vigilantism and mob lynching, Prime Minister Narendra Modi today said killing people on pretext of protecting cows is not acceptable and warned that no one has the right to take law into his hands.
Addressing a public meeting to mark the centenary of the Mahatma Gandhi’s Sabarmati ashram here, Modi said indulging in violence in the name of “gau bhakti” goes fully against the ideals of the Father of the Nation.
Voicing his concern on the spate of incidents of lynching and violence over cows’ protection, the Prime Minister said nothing would be achieved from such acts.
“Today, I want to express my sadness and my pain, when I am here at the Sabarmati ashram,” he said.
“This is a country which has the tradition of giving food to ants, street dogs, fish, the country where Mahatma Gandhi taught us lessons of non-violence. What has happened to us?”, Modi asked.
“If a patient dies due to an unsuccessful operation, relatives burn down hospitals and beat up doctors. Accident is an accident. When people die or are injured in the accidents, a group of people come together and burn vehicles,” he said, pointing out the prevalent trend among the people of taking law into their hands, and the mob violence.
“Nobody would have practised cow protection and cow worship more than Mahatma Gandhi and (his follower) Vinoba Bhave. They showed us the way how to protect cow. The country will have to adopt their way,” the Prime Minister said.
“The Indian Constitution also teaches us about cow protection. But does this (cow protection) give us any right to kill a person. Is this gau bhakti (cow worship)? Is this cow protection?”, Modi asked.
“Killing people in the name of ‘gau bhakti’ is not acceptable,” he asserted, saying “this is not something Mahatma Gandhi would have approved.”
“Let’s all work together. Let’s create the India of Mahatma Gandhi’s dreams. Let’s create an India our freedom fighters would be proud of,” he said.
Modi said “no person in this nation has the right to take the law in his or her own hands.”
“Violence has never solved and will never solve any problem. As a society, there is no place for violence,” he said.
The Prime Minister’s remarks come against the backdrop of the growing incidents of cow vigilantism. A Muslim youth was last week killed on board a Mathura-bound train by people who taunted his family and repeatedly called them “anti- nationals” and “beef eaters.”(PTI)