You all are making a mistake. Now fair warning ahead, please don't read my post if you just had lunch or dinner.
This wet market is based in a place called Churchandpur market in Manipur. And in some parts of Nagaland.
No Indian government official will dare venture into those areas to enforce a ban on wild meat. Most of these tribes practiced headhunting just a few generations ago.
Some of the tribes still display the skulls of their vanquished foes in their homes.
Myanmar (Burma) is next door to their location. I once drove into North-eastern India from the Burmese border. On both sides, there are abundant wet markets openly selling live animals which no Muslim or Hindu will imagine consuming. I have seen dogs in cages being sold like poultry right on a national highway which goes to Calcutta. Even the restaurants and cafes sell these exotic meats. So if you're hungry and eating a mutton dish, you shouldn't calculate what is inside:
everything qualifies as mutton!
Vegetarian food is practically unheard of in those parts (I may be wrong).
As you can imagine, that part of India is unlike anything in mainland India. Some people there are eating monkey hands so they most certainly have no problem with beef/pork.
However, most North-easterners are very hospitable, friendly, and kind to visitors.
Only a minority still consumes bushmeat, or participates in the illegal animals trade. Despite having seen with my own eyes, I think PETA is exaggerating this story for sound bytes.
Some tribes in mainland Indian states such as Jharkhand, Chhatisgarh, Orissa eat ants, bats, snakes, and dead birds.
Pure vegetarian India is only 25-30% Indians. But they of course dominate the narrative.
Also beef is legally available and widely consumed in a few Indian states: Kerala, West Bengal, and the North-eastern states of course.