Young Life Cut Short : Gorakhpur NEET Aspirant Brutally Killed by 'Cattle Smugglers', Villagers Erupt in Anger

by · TFIPOST.com

A shocking incident from Gorakhpur has once again exposed the brutal realities of cattle smuggling. On the night of 15 September, Deepak Gupta, a 19-year-old NEET aspirant, was murdered in cold blood by Cattle Smugglers when he tried to stop their gang from stealing cattle in Mauachapi village of Pipraich. Deepak’s blood-soaked body, with his head crushed, was found four kilometers away from his home after four hours of desperate search. His only “crime” was that he stood up against those who profit by destroying the sacred bond between villagers and their cattle.

Smugglers Kill Student in Cold Blood

According to reports from Dainik Bhaskar, the smugglers arrived in three vehicles late Monday night and began loading stolen cattle. Alerted by his cousin’s son, Deepak rushed to the warehouse on his scooter, accompanied by 10–15 villagers. When they confronted the smugglers, the criminals turned violent. They forcibly dragged Deepak into a DCM vehicle, brutally assaulted him, and later dumped his body between his home and the warehouse, just 500 meters apart. Police later confirmed the recovery of 2–3 cattle from the smugglers’ vehicle, proving the crime beyond doubt.

Villagers’ Fury

The murder ignited outrage in the entire village. Furious locals managed to capture one smuggler, set his vehicle ablaze, and beat him severely. When police, led by Gorakhpur North SP Jitendra Srivastava and Pipraich station in-charge Purushottam, tried to rescue the criminal, angry villagers clashed with them. Both officers sustained injuries in the confrontation. By Tuesday morning, hundreds of locals blocked the Gorakhpur–Pipraich road demanding justice, forcing authorities to deploy forces from four police stations along with PAC to control the situation.

This gruesome murder highlights the growing menace of cattle smugglers who operate fearlessly. Cattle theft has become a recurring nightmare in parts of Uttar Pradesh, leaving villagers vulnerable. Deepak Gupta’s death is not an isolated case but part of a larger pattern where smugglers resort to violence if resisted. That a young medical aspirant had to pay with his life for protecting cattle shows how deep-rooted this menace has become.

Hypocrisy of So-Called Pet Lovers

What makes the tragedy even worse is the hypocrisy of so-called “animal lovers” and NGOs. The same activists who flood social media with outrage over street dogs remain silent when cattle are smuggled, tortured, and killed. For them, cows are not animals worth saving; only dogs matter. Their selective activism exposes their agenda and complete disregard for India’s cultural, rural, and dharmic ethos. Deepak died trying to stop cattle thieves, yet not a single so-called animal rights group has raised its voice for him or for the tortured cattle.

Justice for Deepak, Crackdown on Smuggling

The murder of Deepak Gupta has shaken Gorakhpur. Cattle smugglers are not just criminals; they are cold-blooded killers who threaten both human life and sacred tradition. Stronger laws, stricter policing, and swift punishment are the only answers to end this menace. The silence of “pet lovers” and NGOs only reveals their hypocrisy, but the voice of ordinary villagers must not be ignored. India must treat cattle smuggling as the grave crime it is, and ensure that no family ever suffers such a loss again.