Phone
rings at Municipal Corporation of Delhi MCD.What happens when person named Ram
reports about a dead cow to MCD official after Cow Protection becomes a
political issue in the Country.(Hypothetical but full of sarcastic moments)
MCD: Hello?
Ram: Haan hello, there is a dead cow lying outside our house —
can you please come and remove it?
MCD: Are you sure it’s a cow?
Ram: What?
MCD: Are you sure it’s a cow – not a horse, or goat?
Ram: Well, looks like a cow, has two horns, an udder…
MCD: Forget all that. Does it have a Cowdhaar bar code on its
ear?
Ram: A what?
MCD: A Cowdhaar bar code. Just as your Aadhaar card has
biometric information, every registered cow is now required to have a bar code
attached to its ear that contains all relevant details.
Ram: ‘Wait, let me check — no I can’t see any bar code.
MCD: An unregistered cow — that’s going to be a problem.
Ram: Is there something I can do — I don’t want it lying outside
the house?
MCD: You need to get a ‘No Objection Certificate’ from the local
Gau Rakshak Dal leader, duly attested by the panchayat head or district
magistrate as well as the local police chief.
Ram: Why do I need that?
MCD: You don’t, Sahib, but I do. See, if I take away a cow that
does not have a valid Cowdhaar code, then someone later can claim it was taken
illegally. And the Gau Rakshaks will not spare me.
Ram: I don’t even know there was a local Gau Rakshak dal — how
do I get hold of them?
MCD: Dial 1800 Gau Mata — they will assist you.
Ram: Okay, then you will come to pick up the cow?
MCD: Sure, as long as you have the death certificate.
Ram: For a cow? Who will give me a death certificate from a cow?
MCD: Any licensed Gau-ne-cow-logist, with a priest as a witness.
Ram: What’s a Gau-ne-cow-logist?
MCD: A doctor who specialises in bovine medicine — it’s the
latest field of study in our medical schools. With over 180 million potential
patients, whose lives are all very valuable to society, there is a lot of money
to be made!
Ram: Ok, so NoC, followed by death certificate — then you pick
up the cow?
MCD: We need a release form from the district animal welfare
unit — basically that the cow is not someone else’s property and that you have
the right to ask me to take it away.
Ram: But it’s dead!!
MCD: And that makes it even more important — if it were a live
cow, would you even be calling me?
Ram: No, but this is ridiculous — how long will it take to get
the release form?
MCD: It depends, some animal welfare officers require you to
place the ad for 14 days, others for an entire month.
Ram: An ad??? What kind of ad?
MCD: Basically like a missing person’s ad — you place it in two
local papers, one English and one vernacular — asking if anyone has claim to
the cow. Take a picture of the cow and submit it along with any identification
marks.
Ram: But in 14 days, the carcass would rot completely — what’s
the point of your coming then?
MCD: The point is that we need to follow the rules and
regulations so that everyone’s interest is protected — especially that of the
cow!
Ram: This is ludicrous. You know what, I’m just going to get a
few people and pick it up myself and move it.
MCD: I would strongly advise you against doing that.
Ram: Why — who’s going to stop me?
MCD: Your local Gau Rakshak Dal (Cow savior group), for one —
all calls to this number are being recorded. So the fact that you have a dead
cow at your house is already known to the various authorities, and they will
expect you to contact them for the relevant forms. And fees.
Ram: Fees?
MCD: Of course — do you think the NoC, death certificate etc.
come for free? It will cost you 5-15,000 rupees by the time you’re done.
Ram:
That’s extortion!
MCD:
No, just the new e-cow-nomics!
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