×
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

71kg of waste found in pregnant cow's stomach, dies

There is no official, nationwide data on how many cows die every year from eating plastic
Last Updated 04 March 2021, 10:40 IST

Vets have extracted 71 kilograms (156.5 pounds) of plastic, nails and other garbage from a pregnant cow, but both the animal and her baby died.

The case has highlighted the country's twin problems of pollution and stray cattle.

An estimated five million cows roam in the cities, with many gorging on the vast amounts of plastic litter on the streets.

This cow was rescued after a road accident in late February by the People For Animals Trust Faridabad.

A vet soon noticed the pregnant bovine was struggling.

In a four-hour operation on February 21, vets found nails, plastic, marbles and other garbage in its stomach, said trust president Ravi Dubay.

They also attempted a premature delivery.

"The baby did not have enough space to grow in her mother's belly so she died," Dubay told AFP.

Read: 8 held for slaughtering 16 cows in Telangana's Siddipet

Three days later, the cow also died.

"In my 13 years of experience, this is the most garbage we have taken from a cow... we had to use muscle power to get it all out," Dubay said.

Previous surgeries done by the organisation based in Haryana have found up to 50 kilograms of waste in cows' stomachs.

"The cow is very sacred for us, but no-one cares for their life. In every corner in every city they eat the waste," Dubay added.

Under Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government, strictly enforced protection policies have resulted in more cows on the loose.

Eating or slaughtering cows is banned in some states.

Romula D'Silva, vice-president of the Karuna Society for Animals & Nature in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh, said the problem of garbage-eating cows affects "every city in India, big or small".

"Wherever there are cows on the streets, you can be sure they are full of plastic. My heart breaks for them as they can have very painful deaths," she told AFP.

Around a decade ago, 35 cows suddenly came into Karuna Society's care, according to D'Silva.

One unexpectedly died and a post-mortem examination revealed a mess of plastic and other garbage in its stomach.

Further surgeries on the remaining animals found that all of them had plastic in their abdomens.

Karuna Society has performed rumenotomies on around 60 cows since then, she said.

There is no official, nationwide data on how many cows die every year from eating plastic.

But in 2017, a Times of India report cited veterinary officials and animal welfare groups estimating that around 1,000 cows die annually just in the northern city of Lucknow from eating plastic.

ADVERTISEMENT
(Published 04 March 2021, 10:40 IST)

Follow us on

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT