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Those Who Can't Live Without Beef Shouldn't Come To Haryana, Says State Minister

Those Who Can't Live Without Beef Shouldn't Come To Haryana, Says State Minister
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
FILE- In this Oct. 2, 2015 file photo, student activists holds a placard during a protest denouncing the killing of a 52-year-old Muslim farmer Mohammad Akhlaq, in New Delhi, India. Government investigators have found the fatal mob attack of a Muslim man over rumors he slaughtered a cow was premeditated, and not a spontaneous act stemming from heightened emotion and religious devotion as many Hindu nationalist politicians have claimed. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri, file)

Ambala -- Haryana Health Minister Anil Vij today stroked a fresh row saying those who cannot live without eating beef should not visit the state where stringent cow protection laws are in place. Vij said that there were some countries Indians don't visit because eating habits of that nation did not suit them.

"There are some countries we don't visit because food and drinking habits there don't suit us. Likewise, those people who can't live without eating beef should not come to Haryana," Vij told reporters.

He was asked to comment if the state government had contemplated issuing licences/special permits to foreigners to consume beef in the state.

Vij said Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar had yesterday clarified the issue and ruled out any plan to issue such licences and give relaxation to foreigners to consume beef in the state.

Vij had last year pitched for declaring cow as the national animal and launched an online poll on the issue.

Khattar had reportedly said earlier he was open to relax the beef ban for foreigners in the state.

Haryana's 'Gauvansh Sanrakshan and Gausamvardhan Bill, passed by the Assembly in March last year, came into force in November last.

Under the provisions of the law, cow trafficking, slaughtering and eating beef are banned in the state.

The law clamps a complete ban on cow slaughter in the state and provides for a rigorous imprisonment ranging from three years to 10 years for killing the animal.

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