Police at the site of the lynching at Brakhad village of Madhya Pradesh’s Narmadapuram district. Photo: By arrangement.

By Kashif Kakvi / The Wire

Bhopal: A 50-year-old Muslim man was beaten to death on suspicion of smuggling cows by cow vigilantes near Brakhad village of Madhya Pradesh’s Narmadapuram district at midnight on Tuesday, August 2.

According to police, Nazir Ahmad, a resident of Maharashtra’s Amravati was allegedly transporting 28 cows along with Shaikh Lala (38) and Sayed Mushtaq (40) from nearby village named Nanderwada of Narmadapuram district when a group of cow vigilantes armed with sticks and rods, stopped the truck and assaulted them. It was around 12:30 am.

Informed by locals, police reached the spot within half an hour of the incident, and rushed the three to a nearby hospital.

Nazir, who was hit on the head, succumbed to his injuries at the hospital. The two others have reported multiple injuries and are under treatment at the district hospital, the police said.

Speaking to The Wire, Narmadapuram Superintendent of Police Gurkaran Singh said the incident occurred “8-10 kilometres from Nanderwada village, where they had loaded the cows onto their vehicles.”

“Armed cow vigilantes who assaulted them are residents of nearby villages who had received information on bovine smuggling,” the SP said.

The SP said Nazir’s family have been informed of his death and are on their way to Narmadapuram. “The survivors’ statements are yet to be recorded,” he added.

Police claim to have rescued 26 cows from the truck. Two cows were found dead. The rescued bovines were sent to government-run cowsheds.

This story was originally published in thewire.in . Read the full story here