India

Shahzad’s brutal killing by Saharanpur police proves cow is safer than human being in India

Islamabad: The brutal killing of an alleged cow slaughter Mohammad Shahzad by the Saharanpur police is a cold-blooded reminder that in the current climate, a cow is safer than a human being.

According to Kashmir Media Service, the brutal killing is a chilling indictment of a state that has officially integrated the violent tactics of religious mobs into its standard operating procedure.

Under the guise of an “encounter” triggered by alleged cow slaughter, this bloodthirsty act confirms that the government now treats its own citizens as expendable targets. By executing a man with 44 registered cases, most of which stem from communalized cattle laws, the state has successfully elevated the life of an animal above the fundamental human rights.

By taking a life to protect an animal, the Saharanpur police have abandoned the rule of law for religious extremism. This is no longer just about angry mobs but the state itself has now become a lawless judge and executioner.

The blood of Shahzad exposes a broken system that values religious symbols more than the lives of its own citizens.

Law enforcement has traded professional neutrality for a hateful agenda that treats human beings as expendable, targeted “criminals.”

Since 2014, a systematic pattern of hate has been built where at least 44 people were murdered by cow protection groups.

With over 4,000 arrests under cow slaughter laws in 2020 alone, the state is using legislation as a tool of mass communal harassment.

The fact that 36 out of 44 victims of cattle-related violence are from one community proves this is a targeted campaign of terror.

Using the National Security Act (NSA) against 139 people for animal-related issues shows the state treats cattle transport as a threat to the nation.

From the murder of Mohammad Akhlaq in 2015 to the death of Shahzad in 2026, the state has successfully legalized mob justice.

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