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After Hindutva groups in Karnataka called for the boycott of halal meat products, state Chief Minister BS Bommai said on Wednesday, 30 March, that he will investigate the issue as ‘serious objections’ had been raised against halal meat.
"The issue has to be studied in its entirety," Bommai told media persons on Wednesday. "There are no rules as such. It was a practice that was going on. Now, serious objections are raised. We will look into it," he said, reported IANS.
The CM further stated that the government would make their own stand known later. "Various organisations will be doing their own campaigns, we know what to respond to and what not to. Where it is required, we will respond," he said, according to The Hindu.
Meanwhile, Former Karnataka Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy on Thursday, slammed right wing activists for demanding the ban, urging people in the rural areas to "not encourage saffron clad Hindutva activists".
The saffron party is reportedly gaining momentum in the rural areas of the state which are JD-S stronghold.
Terming activists of Vishva Hindu Parishad and Bajarang Dal, who have taken up halal campaigns, as "anti-social elements", the former chief minister said, "The trend of flaunting saffron shawls and creating disharmony has to stop and it won't be encouraged in the state," he said.
Meanwhile, the top leaders of the party who are supporting the ban on halal meat criticised Kumaraswamy for using the word 'mardaangi' for Bommai.
Minister for Revenue R Ashoka stated that the 'mardaangi' reference to an incumbent chief minister did not suit his dignity and statements like this will spoil the harmony in the state.
The chief minister, however, maintained that it is not a question of 'mardaangi'. "The government has handled issues efficiently and maintained law and order," Bommai said. Kumaraswamy has since apologised for his 'mardaangi' comment on Bommai.
The Hindu Janajagruti Samiti had earlier called for the boycott of halal meat products during the Ugadi celebrations in the state.
Home Minister Araga Jnanendra said that the call for the boycott of halal products was the result of the Muslim community's protest against the high court's hijab row verdict, wherein it had ruled that students would not be allowed to wear the headscarf to educational institutions.
"One particular community's decision to protest the recent High Court judgment in the hijab row has led to such reactions. I only wish it cools down soon," Jnanendra stated.
BJP functionary CT Ravi had also sought a ban on 'halal' meat, describing it as 'economic Jihad' perpetrated by the Muslim community.
(With inputs from IANS and The Hindu.)
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