Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Puerto Rico law defies US ban

- By Danica Coto

The island territory fought to keep 400-year-old cockfighti­ng tradition alive despite federal ban.

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Puerto Rico defied the U.S. government by adopting a law Wednesday to keep cockfighti­ng alive, seeking to protect a 400year-old tradition on the island despite a federal ban that takes effect this week.

Those in the cockfighti­ng business cautiously rejoiced amid concerns over the U.S. territory trying to sidestep a federal law that President Donald Trump signed a year ago.

“We are certainly challengin­g a federal law. We know what that implies,” Rep. Gabriel Rodriguez Aguilo, who co-authored the bill, told The Associated Press late Tuesday before the announceme­nt was made public.

Rodriguez said he expected the fight to end up in federal court.

As word spread, those in the cockfighti­ng industry cheered the news as some met with Gov. Wanda Vazquez, who announced Monday that she plans to run in the island’s 2020 general elections.

“There’s going to be work!” exclaimed Domingo

Ruiz, who owns more than 30 gamecocks and has spent more than half a century in the business. “We’re going to keep the fight alive.”

Cockfighti­ng generates an estimated $18 million a year and employs about 27,000 people, according to the bill approved by Puerto Rico’s House and Senate. The island’s legislator­s had bristled at Trump’s move, noting in their bill that cockfights and betting on them have been “part of our culture and folklore ever since their introducti­on to Puerto Rico in the 17th century.“

Puerto Rico has 71 cockfighti­ng establishm­ents in 45 municipali­ties licensed by the island’s Department of Sports and Recreation, said Secretary Adriana Sanchez. She defended the cockfighti­ng tradition and contended the U.S. government banned fights for economic and not animal welfare reasons.

Sanchez said a ban would just drive the fights undergroun­d on an island mired in a 13-year recession and still struggling to recover from Hurricane Maria.

“It’s very hard for someone to find a Plan B from one moment to the next that would allow them to make a living through something that is not cockfighti­ng,” she said.

Animal welfare activists have long pushed to end cockfights in U.S. territorie­s, saying they are cruel and noting they are illegal in all 50 states.

Wayne Pacelle, founder of the Washington-based Animal Wellness Action, said he doesn’t believe the statistics on Puerto Rico cockfighti­ng.

“They are widely exaggerati­ng the economic value,” he said. “Watching animals slash each other just for human entertainm­ent and gambling is not judged as a legitimate enterprise by mainstream people.”

The measure says it is legal for Puerto Rico to host cockfights as long as people don’t export or import gamecocks or any goods or services related to cockfighti­ng. The latter actions would violate the federal law, based on how Puerto Rico officials interpret it.

“It remains to be seen whether that’s how federal authoritie­s understand it,” Rep. Luis Vega Ramos said.

 ?? RICARDO ARDUENGO/GETTY-AFP ?? Gov. Wanda Vazquez talks to reporters after signing a law in favor of cockfighti­ng.
RICARDO ARDUENGO/GETTY-AFP Gov. Wanda Vazquez talks to reporters after signing a law in favor of cockfighti­ng.

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