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India's ban on cattle export turns out a blessing for Bangladesh

Riyad

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Published : 21 Aug 2016, 21:31:29
3.5 miliion cows ready for sale in Eid-ul-Azha

Yasir Wardad

cattle-market_1.jpg



Cattle traders and market operators hope for enough supply of sacrificial animals on the occasion of upcoming Eid-ul-Azha as a good number of people have entered the business due to growing demand and handsome profits last year.

Involvement of a large number of farmers and traders in cattle farming would further help reduce the country's dependency on imported animals ahead of such biggest festival.

More than 3.5 million cows have been reared for sale this year on the occasion of Eid-ul-Azha which is 40 per cent higher than that of last year, official data showed.

Md Arifur Rahman, a cattle farm owner at Jaldhaka upazila in Nilphamari, said farmers sold cattle and made handsome profits during Eid-ul-Azha last year which encouraged many others to enter the business.

"Last year I reared four oxen, but I have been rearing 18 oxen this year," he said, adding that he was feeding the cows with straw, grass, pulses bran (bhushi), oil cake and tree leaves etc.

He said the demand for local cows is higher than that of foreign or chemically-treated-fattened ones.

Mr Rahman bought these oxen at Tk 22,000 each and it cost him minimum Tk 7,000 to feed and look after an animal.

He was expecting to earn Tk 15,000-Tk 17,000 as profit from sale of each animal before Eid.

However, traders in Rangpur, Bogra, Sirajganj, Pabna, Narsingdi, Munshiganj, Kushtia, Jhenaidah, Chuadanga and elsewhere in the country are passing busy time to fulfil orders from Dhaka and Chittagong.

Md Shariful, a trader of Darshana in Chuadanga, on Saturday came to Gabtoli cattle market, the permanent cattle market in the city.

Talking to the FE, he said a local cow weighing 90-100 kilograms is now selling at Tk 34,000-Tk 35,000, which was Tk 28,000-Tk 30,000 a year back.

Price of an Indian variety of the same weight is Tk 20,000-Tk 22,000, he said.

Mr Shariful said he stopped importing cows from India after killing of one of his relatives on the border by Border Security Force (BSF) of India.

Director General of Department of Livestock Services (DLS) Ajay Kumar Roy told the FE that cattle production witnessed a tremendous growth just in one and a half years due to increase in demand.

He said handsome prices for animals in local market have been encouraging many others to return to the business again.

The cattle farmers across the country are ready to sell more than 3.5 million cows on the occasion of Eid-ul-Azha. The demand for cows during Eid is almost same, he added.

Nearly 7.0 million goats and sheep have also been reared for the festival, he said, adding that farmers have been able to rear 1.0 million more cows thanks to booming commercial farms across the country.

He also said more than 50,000 small and medium-sized farms have emerged in the country in last one and a half years.

The government has launched a loan scheme under which cattle farmers can get loan at 5 per cent interest rate, he said.

DLS officials said 2.3 million cows were imported in the fiscal year 2014 which has declined to 0.5 million in the FY'16.

According to DLS, the country has a total of 24.5 million cattle including cows and buffaloes.

DLS data revealed that 10.9 million animals, including 3.3 million cows, were sacrificed on the occasion of Eid-ul-Azha in the country last year.

Bangladesh Tanners Association president Shaheen Ahmed said the local leather industry is largely dependent on imported cows.

"Supply of local animals should be increased to keep the leather sector vibrant," he added.

Bangladesh Meat Traders Association secretary general Md Rabiul Alam told the FE that prices of local cows are now 20-25 per cent higher than that of a year ago.

He said beef is now selling at Tk 380-Tk 440 per kg across the country which was Tk 340-Tk 380 per kg a year ago.

He said restriction on cattle export by neighbouring India might have caused hike in beef prices, but it could ultimately help Bangladesh to be self-sufficient in cattle.

"We expect 0.5 to 0.6 million cattle may be brought to Bangladesh from India on the occasion of Eid-ul-Azha," he said.



http://www.thefinancialexpress-bd.com/2016/08/21/42943/3.5m-cows-ready-for-sale-in-Eid-ul-Azha
 
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This is Indian bull 'Brahman'.

brahman_bull_tarzan.jpg



This is Bangladeshi bull
dsc_0181-brown-bull-web.jpg

I don't think this type of Bull comes over the border. They are very expensive because oof their weight and are traded legally from some other countries.

But As Bangladeshis say Deshi Bull tastes the Best.
 
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I don't think this type of Bull comes over the border. They are very expensive because oof their weight and are traded legally from some other countries.

But As Bangladeshis say Deshi Bull tastes the Best.

Hmm.. we get this from India. These are old expired cows good for nothing. Even meats are hard as f*k. Last year we gave one Indian cow because deshi cows were not available for last moment. We bought a huge Indian white cow. It was all fats. no meat. I am not kidding.

cattle-660x330.jpg
 
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Hmm.. we get this from India. These are old expired cows good for nothing. Even meats are hard as f*k. Last year we gave one Indian cow because deshi cows were not available for last moment. We bought a huge Indian white cow. It was all fats. no meat. I am not kidding.

cattle-660x330.jpg

Why would we send you anything better? Its all you can afford so thats all you can get.

If you can animal husbandry for cheaper, then do it yourself and stop complaining about the free market dynamics.

And learn what a past and future tense is silly:

but it could ultimately help Bangladesh to be self-sufficient in cattle.

compare to title:

India's ban on cattle export turns out a blessing for Bangladesh

The title should be "may turn out"....a lot has to happen for this theory to be proven as sustainable esp given BD limited land resources and already massive population density.
 
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Hmm.. we get this from India. These are old expired cows good for nothing. Even meats are hard as f*k. Last year we gave one Indian cow because deshi cows were not available for last moment. We bought a huge Indian white cow. It was all fats. no meat. I am not kidding.

cattle-660x330.jpg

Does not look like the animals were cared for properly too skinny
 
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The title should be "may turn out"....a lot has to happen for this theory to be proven as sustainable esp given BD limited land resources and already massive population density.

Saw the news in another Bengali daily couple of weeks ago. It is just farmers have started to rear cows targeting Qurbani sensing profits. Animal Farms need lands but when a farmer raise four or five cows beside his usual business of growing crops that can easily be done in the back of every house. 5 cows will at least provide a net profit of 100000 tk in the Qurbani Eid.

Does not look like the animals were cared for properly too skinny

This look is typical of Rajsthani cows. Indians would know more.
 
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Saw the news in another Bengali daily couple of weeks ago. It is just farmers have started to rear cows targeting Qurbani sensing profits. Animal Farms need lands but when a farmer raise four or five cows beside his usual business of growing crops that can easily be done in the back of every house. 5 cows will at least provide a net profit of 100000 tk in the Qurbani Eid.



This look is typical of Rajsthani cows. Indians would know more.

We will have to see how the sector is in a time frame of 10 years or so.

Animal husbandry sustainability cannot be determined in just a cpl years.....because many of the scaling up issues only come much later. The early period is always the best and it gets progressively harder from there.
 
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I don't think this type of Bull comes over the border. They are very expensive because oof their weight and are traded legally from some other countries.

But As Bangladeshis say Deshi Bull tastes the Best.
This is Indian bull 'Brahman'.

http://old.embryoplus.com/cattle_brahman.html

brahman_bull_tarzan.jpg



This is Bangladeshi bull

dsc_0181-brown-bull-web.jpg
Bangladeshi cows look beautiful tbh, no wrinkled fats, leaner meat, beautiful overall appearance. Bangladeshi cow any day for life.
 
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Stop killing animals for celebration. This is uncivilized desert tradition. You guys are in 21 century so be civilized.

By rule 70% of the meat is given to poor people or poor relatives who don't have access to high class protien. Only 30% are kept for household consumption. Even the skin is donated to the poor.

We are civilized enough, We do not protect food in the name of religion when people are starving. Go figure
 
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