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| Photo Credit: AP. |
TORDESILLAS, Spain (AP) — Hundreds of people took part Tuesday in a centuries-old Spanish bull-chasing festival, but under orders once again that the animal — which is eventually killed in any case — should not be harmed with spears or darts.
The Toro de
La Vega (The Bull in the Meadow) festival in the northcentral town of
Tordesillas traditionally saw the bull speared to death by revelers who chased
it from the town to outlying fields on horseback or on foot before thousands of
onlookers, in what was one of Spain’s goriest spectacles.
Organizers
say the tradition dates from the 14th century.
Animal
rights protests over the years have led to changes in the spectacle and in 2016
it was prohibited to kill the bull in public during the festival — although it
was still permitted to put the animal to death out of the public eye
afterwards. That year saw scuffles between animal rights activists and locals.
After a
two-year hiatus because of the coronavirus pandemic, the town tried to allow
darts to be thrown at the bull this year but the government and animal rights
groups intervened.
The town has
long accused animal rights activists, the media and outsiders of meddling in an
event that’s part of their local culture.
Tuesday’s
Toro de La Vega festival was held with greatly reduced crowds. The rules were
adhered to, there were no scuffles with activists and the bull was discreetly
killed after the event — with its flesh sold as prime beef.
