The Supreme Court of India refused to grant an urgent hearing for a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) seeking the strict enforcement of anti-cow slaughter laws across states ahead of the upcoming Bakrid (Eid-al-Adha) festival on May 28, 2026.
A Vacation Bench comprising Chief Justice of India Surya Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi made it clear that regular listing protocols cannot be bypassed for applications filed with sudden, eleventh-hour desperation.
The matter was brought to the court’s attention via an oral mentioning by Advocate Barun Kumar Sinha, representing the petitioner, Satish Kumar Aggarwal former Vice-President of the Akhil Bharat Hindu Mahasabha. Sinha pressed the bench for an immediate hearing, arguing that with Bakrid scheduled for May 28, 2026, time was running out.
“Day after tomorrow is Bakrid. This is a plea to seek implementation of anti-cow slaughter law. If this can be listed tomorrow… We are seeking a hearing so that if your lordships are persuaded, an interim order can be passed,” Sinha urged the court.
However, the Bench was entirely unimpressed by the timing of the application. Dismissing the request for an emergency intervention out of hand, Chief Justice Surya Kant remarked:
“You remembered this a day before… No urgency. Thanks.”
By declining the urgent listing, the apex court has effectively ensured that the petition will not receive a special holiday eve hearing, leaving it to be taken up in the ordinary, regular course of the court’s calendar long after the festival concludes.
In his Public Interest Litigation (PIL), Satish Kumar Aggarwal put forth a series of expansive prayers aiming to alter how animal welfare laws are monitored during major religious events. The core of the petition heavily stressed the gap between existing state legislation and its actual execution on the ground. The petitioner argued that while multiple states have robust statutory frameworks prohibiting or heavily restricting the slaughter of cows, bulls, and bullocks, these laws are frequently sidelined or poorly enforced due to administrative oversight or logistical strain during specific festive windows.
To counter this, the plea sought a clear, explicit writ of mandamus from the apex court commanding all state governments to rigidly enforce their respective local anti-cow slaughter statutes. The petitioner specifically targeted the preventative aspect of policing, demanding that state machineries be placed on high alert to actively protect cows and their progeny from being subjected to illegal sacrifices. By framing the issue around the “festive periods,” the petition insisted that standard, year round enforcement protocols are insufficient to handle the sudden, concentrated spike in cattle transit and slaughter that typically precedes such occasions.
Beyond the immediate policing of illegal sacrifices, Aggarwal’s petition shifted its focus toward systemic, structural reforms within the meat processing industry. A major secondary prayer in the PIL called for a mandatory judicial directive that would compel all state governments to immediately notify and implement uniform, stringent regulatory guidelines for local slaughterhouses. The petitioner contended that the lack of standardized executive oversight across different municipal and state jurisdictions has created regulatory loopholes, allowing unauthorized or completely illegal slaughter operations to thrive under the radar.
According to the petition, these proposed uniform guidelines are essential to establishing real-world accountability. The plea argued that every single state needs a formalized, transparent set of rules governing the operation, licensing, and day to day monitoring of slaughter facilities in strict accordance with the law. By introducing standardized protocols such as mandatory ante mortem veterinary inspections and strict tracking of animal supply chains the petitioner aimed to eliminate the clandestine transport and processing of prohibited cattle, thereby checking illegal activities well before the animals ever reach a slaughter facility.
The administrative and judicial machinery across the country has been highly active regarding cattle slaughter regulations over the last few weeks. The Supreme Court’s refusal to step in comes on the heels of a significant decision by the Calcutta High Court.
On May 21, 2026, the Calcutta High Court similarly declined to grant an interim stay on a West Bengal government notification that mandated strict regulation of animal slaughter ahead of Eid-ul-Azha. The state’s notification required strict adherence to the West Bengal Animal Slaughter Control Act, 1950, including the compulsion of obtaining “fit for slaughter” certificates from certified veterinarians. These certificates are legally restricted to animals above a specific age or those permanently incapacitated for work or breeding.
The High Court noted that the government’s notification merely executed directives already laid down by the judiciary in 2018, finding no reason to stall enforcement at an interim stage.
The enforcement of anti-cow slaughter laws remains one of the most thoroughly litigated subjects in Indian constitutional history, operating at the intersection of religious freedom, economic rights, and state directives.
Under Entry 15 of the State List (List II) of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution, the “preservation, protection and improvement of stock and prevention of animal diseases” is a state subject. This has resulted in a fragmented legal landscape. While states like Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Haryana, and Rajasthan enforce total, stringent prohibitions on the slaughter of cows and their progeny, other states follow a regulated, age and utility bound certificate model.
The constitutional landscape governing cattle slaughter in India has been meticulously shaped by decades of dense litigation, balancing delicate questions of religious freedom against state-mandated social engineering. A critical turning point in this jurisprudence arrived with the Supreme Court’s decision in State of West Bengal v. Ashutosh Lahiri (1995). In this case, the apex court was called upon to determine whether the slaughter of cows on the occasion of Bakrid could claim immunity and protection under Article 25 of the Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of conscience and the right to freely profess, practice, and propagate religion.
The Supreme Court definitively ruled that the public sacrifice of cows on Bakrid could not be regarded as an essential, mandatory, or indispensable religious practice of the Islamic faith. The Bench clarified that while the sacrifice of an animal is an integral aspect of the festival, the text and traditions do not mandate that the animal sacrificed must specifically be a cow; other animals could legally and religiously suffice. By applying this “essential religious practice” test, the court effectively uncoupled the slaughter of cows from absolute religious protection, thereby upholding the constitutional validity of state legislative restrictions that banned or regulated the public sacrifice of healthy cattle during festive windows.
While early judicial interventions focused primarily on religious exceptions and the economic utility of healthy cattle, the entire legal paradigm underwent a tectonic shift with the monumental 7-judge Constitution Bench ruling in State of Gujarat v. Mirzapur Moti Kureshi Kassab Jamat (2005). This landmark judgment fundamentally redefined how courts view the lifespan and value of cattle under the Indian Constitution. The central challenge in Mirzapur focused on whether a total, blanket ban on the slaughter of cow progeny including old, decrepit bulls and bullocks that were no longer fit for breeding, milk production, or agricultural drought work violated the fundamental right of butchers to carry on their trade or business under Article 19(1)(g).
In a departure from older precedents like the 1958 Quareshi judgment, the 7-judge Bench heavily prioritized the Directive Principles of State Policy over an absolute interpretation of individual trade rights. The court achieved this by reading the restrictions under Article 19(6) in harmony with Article 48 (which directs the State to organize agriculture and animal husbandry and prohibit the slaughter of cows and calves) and Article 48A (which mandates the protection and improvement of the environment and wildlife).
The Bench famously introduced a unique economic and ecological rationale, observing that the utility of cattle does not expire when they become barren or unfit for labor. The court noted that the continuous generation of organic waste specifically dung and urine serves as a vital source of natural fertilizer, biogas, and alternative energy, making the animal economically valuable to the agrarian economy throughout its natural life. Consequently, the total ban was deemed a “reasonable restriction” in the public interest, cementing the current legal stance that states possess the absolute constitutional authority to enforce total prohibitions on the slaughter of the entire bovine family.
By refusing to treat the current PIL as an emergency, the Supreme Court has once again signaled that while state legislations stand on firm constitutional ground, the apex court will not be used as a platform for last minute interim disruptions to local executive policing right before a major national festival.

