Encumbrance on the Vicious Act of Slaughtering Animals

Sushavan Das
3 min readNov 29, 2020

India is a country where all offences are not punished. The law of this country does not give importance to all matters. Say to say, here is no such power in law for offences. Therefore, even if the perpetrator commits whatever crime he/she pleases, he/she survives and is freed from being punished by the law.

This way, Slaughtering of honest animals has become the gravest and heinous problem of India. People of different castes are sacrificing hundreds and millions of innocent animals for the sake of their religion and place them at the feet of deities. It is hand-written in which religious book that Dharma, the god is asking for the lives of His/Her children. Not only that, dishonest people slaughter the lives of animals to fill their stomachs. It is our diabolical and sadistic deeds which have plunged we, the barbarous and flagitious people into the hell of the hands of the deity of death.

Animals are also killed when they are exploited for other purposes such as the production of dairy products and eggs. Younger cows and chickens produce more milk and eggs, and dairy cows and egg-laying hens are killed when exploiting them is less profitable than breeding new animals and exploiting them instead. In slaughter-houses, animals also experience fear and dreadful pain before they die. Some of the torments like; Percussive stunning: The animals are hit with a wooden or plastic club so they lose consciousness. Electrical stunning: This method is used with big fishes. Fishes are stabbed with a harpoon that has an electrical connection.

Un-wanted animals are therefore slaughtered, beaten to death, burn alive in boiling hot water to slit and gash their skin from body, or cut throats to allow stiff and quick excruciating death.

Government protested and implemented a firm law according to the Constitution of India of 1950, under which hitting or hurting any animal is illegal under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960. Killing, poisoning, maiming or torturing an animal is a cognizable offence under Section 428 and Section 429 of the Indian Penal Code of 1860. The punishment for such an act is rigorous imprisonment which may extend for up to 2 years or a fine or both.

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I have been writing several omnibus of writings. I started writing creativities at the age of seven. I’ve narrated many dramas, wrote collection and pages of stories, directed and casted dramas in the school life. I have kept this passion aside along with my studies. Recently, few months earlier I narrated many tragic and horror Bengali stories in my official website, channel, WFAMS, in YouTube.

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Sushavan Das
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I have articled several omnibus of writings in The Writings’ Daily. I started writing creativities at the age of seven.