Thousands rally in Madrid to demand bullfighting ban

Thousands rally in Madrid to demand bullfighting ban
1 / 2
Protesters take part in a demonstration to demand a ban on bullfighting in Madrid, Spain, on Saturday. (REUTERS/Susana Vera)
Thousands rally in Madrid to demand bullfighting ban
2 / 2
Spanish bullfighter Luis Francisco Espla performs a pass to a Spanish Zalduendo bull during a bullfight of the Feria du Riz, on Saturday in Arles, southern France. (AFP / ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT)
Updated 10 September 2016
Follow

Thousands rally in Madrid to demand bullfighting ban

Thousands rally in Madrid to demand bullfighting ban

MADRID: Thousands of Spaniards took to the streets of Madrid on Saturday to demand an end to the centuries-old but controversial tradition of bullfighting.
The protest came after the anti-bullfighting lobby successfully managed to obtain a ban on a famous festival which ended with a bull being speared to death.
The regional government of Castilla y Leon in June banned the killing of bulls at town festivals, in a move that targeted the northern region’s controversial Toro de la Vega festival where horsemen chase a bull and spear it in front of onlookers.
The Madrid protesters held up banners saying: “Bullfighting, the school of cruelty” and “Bullfighting, a national shame.”
A spokesman for the Party Against the Ill-Treatment of Animals (PACMA) said it was “time to end bullfighting and all other bloody spectacles.”
“Bulls feel and they suffer,” said Chelo Martin Pozo, a 39-year-old from Seville who had come to Madrid for the rally.
“Bullfights are a national shame and if they represent me, then I am not Spanish,” she said.
Spain’s first pro-bullfight lobbying group, the Bull Foundation, made up of breeders, matadors and aficionados, was set up last year.
A number of protest rallies in favor of the controversial past-time have been held recently, such as one in the eastern city of Valencia, a major bullfighting city, which drew thousands of people in March.
Valencia, Spain’s third largest city, meanwhile, has banned the tradition of setting bulls loose with lighted torches attached to their horns called “bous embolats.”