GUWAHATI: A day after reports quoted Union minister of state for home
affairs Kiren Rijiju saying that he eats beef, the Arunachal politician
on Wednesday said India was governed by a Constitution that gave
everyone the freedom to practice his or her faith and food habits and no
restrictions should be put on food habits, such as eating beef.
"Mizoram is a Christian-dominated state and beef forms a part of Mizo
food. Why should anyone impose a ban there? We should respect the Mizo
sentiment. This is what I said in Aizawl on Tuesday evening when some
NGO activists and reporters asked me if they must go to Pakistan to
consume beef," he said.
He said sentiments of Christian and
Muslim-majority states should be respected, as should those of
Hindu-majority states like Maharashtra, Gujarat, Haryana and Madhya
Pradesh. While Hindu-majority states can enact legislation against the
slaughter of cows, it should not be imposed on states like those in the
northeast where many eat beef, he said.
But he clarified that
beef had never been on the table for him and his family. "I was
misquoted by the media in Aizawl. I never said I eat beef. It's
completely wrong. My family does not eat beef either," Rijiju, a
Buddhist MP from West Kameng district, told TOI.
Rijiju stirred
the broth and ruffled saffron feathers when some dailies quoted him as
saying, "No one can impose food habits." It came in the backdrop of
remarks by his ministerial colleague Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi that those who
want to eat beef should go to Pakistan.
Rijiju was quoted as
saying on Tuesday evening that Naqvi's statement on cow slaughter as
"not palatable". He, however, said his colleague has the right to free
speech.
The beef ban in Maharashtra and Haryana has triggered
fears that it could go off the plates in the northeast, where it is a
cheap and important source of protein for a sizeable chunk of the
population. Last month, protesters in Meghalaya had eaten beef in public
during BJP president Amit Shah's visit to Shillong.
"The point
is not about what kind of meat to eat. It's about violation of people's
fundamental right to survival. In a vast and diverse country like ours,
the state cannot interfere with people's food habits," said A Passah,
who took part in the public consumption of beef during Shah's visit.
Similar sentiments were echoed by Naga writer and political activist
Sebastian Zumvu said, "The BJP wants to police our eating habits. What
about the ill-treated cows that we see everywhere? Let each and every
citizen have the right to eat what they want."
Meanwhile, BJP
chief Amit Shah, in Surat on Wednesday, refused to be drawn into the
controversy. "As far as the question of ban on cow slaughter is
concerned, wherever BJP is in power, we have put a ban. On Naqviji, I
don't want to make any comments on his statement as those were his
personal views," Shah said.