China Daily

Colombia protest

Hundreds clash with police, spectators as bullfights return

- By ASSOCIATED PRESS in Bogota

Hundreds of protesters clashed with riot police and harassed spectators attending a bullfight in Bogota on Sunday as the “fiesta brava” returned to Colombia’s capital for the first time in four years.

Police had to fire tear gas to control the protesters, many of whom shouted “murderers” and “torturers” while spitting and sometimes coming to blows with spectators nervously making their way to Bogota’s 1930s-era brick bullring.

There were several arrests as tensions ran high in what at times seemed a reflection of deep social divisions between wealthy, welldresse­d spectators who had expected a booze-filled, fun afternoon and a crowd of mostly young, angry protesters screaming obscenitie­s at all who passed before them.

“Everyone you see going are old, conservati­ve elites,” said David Saitru, a 17-yearold protester dressed in black to mourn what he considered the barbaric killing of the bulls. “My generation thinks differentl­y. We’re not prepared to see an animal suffer.”

Bogota’s previous leftist mayor outlawed bullfighti­ng in 2012. But the Constituti­onal Court later overturned the ban, ruling that it was part of Colombia’s cultural heritage and couldn’t be blocked.

Mayor Enrique Penalosa says that while he sides with animal rights activists who consider the bulls’ slow, agonizing death in front of an audience a barbaric throwback, he has no choice but to enforce the high court’s ruling.

This week he said he supports legislatio­n working its way through Congress to prevent state resources from financing bullfights and leaving it up to each district to decide whether they can take place.

The eight countries where bullfighti­ng still takes place are increasing­ly putting restrictio­ns on the spectacle, in some cases stipulatin­g the bulls be spared a violent death.

In Ecuador, dozens of cities, including the capital Quito, voted to prohibit bullfighti­ng in a 2011 nationwide referendum. A few states in Mexico have also banned the blood sport.

In Spain, where the tradition began, the Constituti­onal Court reversed in October 2016 an earlier ban on bullfighti­ng in Catalonia passed by the regional parliament. Some promoters are working toward holding the first bullfighti­ng in Barcelona, probably in March.

Bogota’s bullring received a major cleanup ahead of Sunday’s reopening and organizers say that one of the biggest beneficiar­ies of this season’s six scheduled bullfights is Bogota itself and that for every dollar in profit about a third goes to the city government.

“We had a fight for freedom and the right to work, which are pillars of our democracy,” Felipe Negret, head of Bogota’s Bullfighti­ng Corp, told El Tiempo newspaper.

Every year, approximat­ely 250,000 bulls are killed in bull fights worldwide, according to the activist group Humane Society Internatio­nal.

Everyone you see going (to the bullfight) are old, conservati­ve elites. My generation thinks differentl­y. We’re not prepared to see an animal suffer.” David Saitru, protester

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 ?? GUILLERMO LEGARIA / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? Animal rights activists clash with riot police as they demand a ban on bullfighti­ng in downtown Bogota, Colombia. The blood sport was outlawed in 2012 but made its return to Bogota’s Santamaria bullring on Sunday after the Constituti­onal Court...
GUILLERMO LEGARIA / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Animal rights activists clash with riot police as they demand a ban on bullfighti­ng in downtown Bogota, Colombia. The blood sport was outlawed in 2012 but made its return to Bogota’s Santamaria bullring on Sunday after the Constituti­onal Court...

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