In his letter to the prime minister, the Congress leader urged him to reconsider the matter afresh by repealing the rules in the "larger interest of the farmers and society".
"The said rules prescribe certain restrictions onthe cattle trade. I would like to bring to your kind attentionthat these rules are unconstitutional and will have a far-reaching negative impact on the Indian society and economy,"he said.
"The absence of efforts to take the states into confidence on such an important matter hits at the very roots of federalism," he said.
The Environment Ministry has recently notified the stringent Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (Regulation of Livestock Markets) Rules, 2017 under the Prevention of Crueltyto Animals Act, banning the sale and purchase of cattle at the animal markets for the purpose of slaughter.
The decision has drawn flak from the opposition parties as well as various organisations who have claimed that itwould hit the export and trade of meat and leather.
The rules that mandated providing documentary proof that the cattle would only be traded for agricultural or domestic purposes would subject the farmers to an additional financial burden, thereby contributing further to the agrarian crisis, he said, citing the case of old and unproductive cattle.
He claimed that the rules also indirectly prohibited the sale of animals outside the state which, he said, was "against the provision of the Constitution", which allowed a free trade of livestock.
Thus, the rules interfered with a subject on the State List, without the consent ofthe state government, Siddaramaiah wrote in his letter to Modi.
Pointing out that meat was a key source of protein for the poor, he said it was consumed by people of all the faiths and not only by the minoritiesand Dalits.
The rules would "negatively" affect the meat and leather industries and the lives of lakhs of people who dependedon them, Siddaramaiah said, adding that they would also "destroy" many public sector meat-processing units, which in turn would "adversely affect the country's economy".
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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