In Mumbai, Eating That Steak Could Cost 5 Years in Jail

88m3

Fast Money & Foreign Objects
Joined
May 21, 2012
Messages
94,297
Reputation
3,927
Daps
167,948
Reppin
Brooklyn
by Siddharth Vikram PhilipAdi Narayan
6:30 PM EST
March 4, 2015

1200x-1.jpg

A vendor sells beef at a roadside stall in Mumbai, in 2012. The government of the state of Maharashtra this week banned eating and slaughtering cows, steer and their byproducts. Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- A prime filet mignon at New York’s Old Homestead Steakhouse will set you back $56. Wolfgang Puck’s Cut in London charges as much as $210 for a ribeye. In Tokyo, a sirloin can top $250.

But nowhere is a juicy piece of beef as dear as in Mumbai, where it can now cost you five years in prison.

The government of the state of Maharashtra this week banned possession of beef and its byproducts and the slaughtering of cows, bulls and bullocks. The prohibition marks a victory for hardline Hindu groups that have sought to protect an animal their religion considers holy.


“This is not the sign of a maturing society,” said Avinash Raheja, an angel investor and founder of Mumbai car-parking app Veh2Park who does not eat beef. “We claim to be the world’s biggest democracy, but does democracy apply only to the right to choose our electoral candidate?”

The hashtag #BeefBan became one of the most trending topics on Twitter Inc., prompting scores of jokes and memes. The move risks appearing to enforce conservative Hindu principles on Muslim and Christian minorities in a nation of 1.2 billion, according to Shiv Visvanathan, a professor at the O.P. Jindal Global University’s school of government and public policy near Delhi.

“The real battle of prohibition today will not be against alcohol, it will be against meat,” Viswanathan said. “Many landlords won’t rent a house if you eat meat. That is also a way of throwing Muslims out.”

Secret Offering
While beef or pork is taboo at many Indian eateries, including McDonald’s Corp. and Burger King outlets, some Mumbai restaurants do serve it and others offer it off the menu.

“If I show beef on the menu, lots of people may not enter,” said P.K. Krishnan, who runs a restaurant specializing in south Indian-cuisine in the Mahim working-class neighborhood. Yet he sells as much as 12 kilograms (26 pounds) of beef daily, mostly in a spicy chili-fry dish popular in Kerala state.

In Imbiss, in the upscale Bandra neighborhood, owner Bruce Rodrigues caters to patrons who put up with a cramped room and air thick with the smell of bacon to tuck into 165 rupee ($2.60) burgers and 265 rupee steaks. After the state’s chief minister announced the ban on March 3, his 10-table place was overwhelmed.

“There were people waiting outside, and that’s quite unusual for a Tuesday afternoon,” said Rodrigues, who used to be a bank manager before opening the restaurant three years ago. “Some regulars came by asking if they can participate in a protest or something.”

Beef Soup
It’s not just steaks and hamburgers. Most of the cows’ offal -- spleen, liver, kidneys and tongue -- is sold to street vendors who mix it with soups and rice to sell to poor locals who can’t afford any other meat.

A bowl of chickpea soup mixed with a piece of grilled beef spleen sells for as little as 10 rupees, said Sultan Shaikh, who been runs a sidewalk stall in the Mahim neighborhood. Most of the customers tend to be Muslims, he said.

“This is the cheapest source of protein,” said Mohammad Ali Qureshi, president of the Bombay Suburban Beef Dealers Association. “For a poor man, one kilo of beef is enough to provide two meals for his family. All are looking at it from the religious angle and not the economic angle.”

In Mumbai alone, almost 100,000 people are involved in the beef and beef-product trade. An abattoir in the suburb of Deonar that slaughters about 400 bullocks and buffalo a day generates revenue of 250,000 rupees daily for the city government. Its operations were halted as of March 4, General Manager Apsing Pawara said.

At a busy eatery close to the Bandra commuter-train station, restaurant owner Maqeen Qureshi says that beef is the cheapest skewered meat he offers. An order of beef kebab at his bustling restaurant costs 60 rupees, whereas mutton costs 100 rupees and chicken costs 90 rupees.

“Every part of the animal - the skin, the organs, the meat, the blood -- it all gets used for something or the other,” Qureshi said.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...s?hootPostID=b8e079aae13fd0fc7853b9d54bca9a5f

eat beef and go to prison in a third world country, brehs
 

NSSVO

Veteran
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
44,964
Reputation
2,975
Daps
87,326
Man dogs can cuddle with you. Cows are just retarded. fukking Asia.
 

88m3

Fast Money & Foreign Objects
Joined
May 21, 2012
Messages
94,297
Reputation
3,927
Daps
167,948
Reppin
Brooklyn
It's cultural :manny:
From what I read, it's illegal in the US to sell dog meat though in most states it's legal to eat it for personal consumption.

But is it fair to Muslims and non Hindus?
 

Liu Kang

KING KILLAYAN MBRRRAPPÉ
Supporter
Joined
May 3, 2012
Messages
14,125
Reputation
5,614
Daps
31,240
But is it fair to Muslims and non Hindus?
It is not fair on those who like to eat beef. Same as non-dog eating laws are not fair on those who like to eat dogs. :manny:
In the West dogs and cats are "sacred" (not in a religious way I mean) because they are beloved pets and therefore they are protected under a variety of animal cruelty laws. Said laws which mostly exclude cows that are designed to feed us in the food industry and treated badly because of intensive industrial methods for production of food at the lowest costs. I have no problem with other cultures thinking otherwise. Also because eating cows specifically is not right.
 
Last edited:

Trajan

Veteran
Joined
May 23, 2012
Messages
18,821
Reputation
5,325
Daps
82,257
Reppin
Frankincense and Myrrh
It is not fair on those who like to eat beef. Same as non-dog eating laws are not fair on those who like to eat dogs. :manny:
In the West dogs and cats are "sacred" (not in a religious way I mean) because they are beloved pets and therefore they are protected under a variety of animal cruelty laws. Said laws which mostly exclude cows that are designed to feed us in the food industry and treated badly because of intensive industrial methods for production of food at the lowest costs. I have no problem with other cultures thinking otherwise. Also because eating cows specifically is not right.

Yes. It's quite easy to fall into the trap of ridiculing things which do not fall within Western societal norms.
 

Nomadum

Woke Dreamer
Joined
Dec 23, 2014
Messages
4,622
Reputation
-695
Daps
9,075
Reppin
Nothing
I respect and understand why it is you could get 5 years for eating beef. but man [censored] this country and it's dumb [censored] laws, you don't even protect women but cows are more sacred? eat a [censored] Mumbai.

Edited to add
I was warned that my language was inappropriate and didn't follow the rules, my fault.
 
Last edited:

Liu Kang

KING KILLAYAN MBRRRAPPÉ
Supporter
Joined
May 3, 2012
Messages
14,125
Reputation
5,614
Daps
31,240
I respect and understand why it is you could get 5 years for eating beef. but man fukk this country and it's dumb ass laws, you don't even protect women but cows are more sacred? eat a dikk Mumbai.
Come on man, you don't need to go hard like that...
 
Top