Srinagar, Aug. 1 -- It was a typical July day, the one that wears you down with heat, smell, and exhaustion.

But nothing could've prepared us for what we found behind that shutter.

Piled high in crates was meat - 1,200 kilograms of it: chopped, packed, and decomposing. There was no refrigeration and ventilation. And, the spoiled stock was about to be dispatched to different eateries across the city.

The officers who carried out the raid, from the Food Safety wing of the Drug and Food Control Organisation, said they had never made a seizure this big.

For me, it confirmed what I've long feared: we are eating meat that should have been destroyed, not served.

This latest seizure isn't an isolated incident. It's a sign of a much deeper ro...