Police in the northeastern state of Assam said they had enrolled a murder case over the passings of Abu Hanifa and Riyazuddin Ali, who were beaten with sticks on Sunday. Two suspects have been kept for addressing.
"They were pursued and beaten with sticks by villagers who said the two young men were attempting to take cows from their eating field," Debaraj Upadhyay, Nagaon's top cop, told AFP by phone.
"When we took them to the doctor's facility during the evening they had surrendered to their wounds," he included.
The occurrence comes in the midst of a rush of rising pressures over the murdering and pirating of bovines in Hindu-dominant part India, where the creature is viewed as hallowed and its butcher is a culpable offense in many states.
There have been a spate of assaults lately by 'dairy animals security' vigilante gatherings, who wander some roadways investigating domesticated animals trucks for any hint of the creature.
A Muslim man kicked the bucket a month ago after his truck conveying dairy animals was assaulted by a gathering in western Rajasthan state.
In any case, Updadhyay expelled any proposal that a vigilante gathering or affiliation was included in the most recent occurrence.
In 2015, a Muslim man was lynched by his neighbors over gossipy tidbits that he had butchered a bovine. Police later said the meat was lamb.
Pundits say the vigilantes have been encouraged by the race in 2014 of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu patriot Bharatiya Janata Party.
A year ago Modi reprimanded the cow insurance vigilantes and encouraged a crackdown against gatherings utilizing religion as a cover for carrying out violations.

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