The Guardian (USA)

Bullfighti­ng firm in Seville to give free tickets to under-eights

- Reuters in Madrid

A firm managing bullfights at Seville’s bullring is to give free tickets to children under eight, adding to a national debate about the controvers­ial Spanish tradition.

The company, Pages, said adult spectators with a ticket for the “novilladas” – practice bullfights involving younger bulls – at Seville’s Maestranza may be accompanie­d by a child free of charge, which it said was “the best way to introduce the little ones” to the world of bullfighti­ng.

José Enrique Zaldívar, who heads the Spanish Associatio­n of Veterinari­ans for the Abolition of Bullfighti­ng, said attracting children was an attempt to regain a declining audience.

“We think it’s wrong that young children are allowed to attend these shows because watching animals suffer can cause psychologi­cal damage,” he added.

Supporters of bullfighti­ng, in which the animal is usually killed by a sword thrust by a matador (“killer”), believe the tradition should be preserved, while critics say it is a cruel ritual with no place in modern society.

This week’s announceme­nt by Pages came just days after the Spanish ministry of culture abolished its national bullfighti­ng award over concern about animal welfare, prompting a rebuke from fans and the conservati­ve opposition who see it as an art form and a staple of national identity.

The ministry of culture declined to comment on Pages’ campaign.

Animal rights party Pacma said it welcomed the award’s eliminatio­n but also called for an end to public subsidies to bullfighti­ng foundation­s and related breeders, which it said amounted to nearly €6m (£5m) between 2020 and 2024.

 ?? Photograph: Julio Munoz/EPA ?? A bullfight at the Maestranza bullring in Seville, Spain.
Photograph: Julio Munoz/EPA A bullfight at the Maestranza bullring in Seville, Spain.

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