In pictures: Traditional bull-taming festival leaves dozens injured
India's Supreme Court had outlawed the sport in 2014 after a plea by animal rights groups
A participant tries to control a bull during the annual bull taming 'Jallikattu' festival in Allanganallur village on the outskirts of Madurai in the southern state of Tamil Nadu on January 17, 2020. PHOTO: AFP
MADURAI:
Dozens of young men were injured on the first day of a traditional bull-taming festival in southern India that activists say is dangerous for both humans and animals.
Participants try to control bulls during the annual bull taming festival. PHOTO: AFP
The sport is extremely popular in rural pockets of Tamil Nadu, where every year hundreds of young men try to hold the hump of the beasts and run, as spectators cheer raucously at events held across the state.
PHOTO: AFP
On the opening day of the festival on Thursday, more than 20 men were injured in the city of Madurai as over 600 men wrestled with as many bulls, officials told local media.
PHOTO: AFP
A female spectator was also injured when a bull hit her near the exit to a venue, the Press Trust of India reported.
Images showed men in colourful jerseys trying to grab the bulls who swayed their long horns and gnarled in fury.
PHOTO: AFP
In past years, competitors had been gored to death.
India's Supreme Court had outlawed the sport in 2014 after a plea by animal rights groups.
PHOTO: AFP
However, the sport was reinstated in 2017 after days of massive protests, following which the Tamil Nadu government stepped in and declared bull taming was a part of the state's culture and identity.
Locals shoot dead leopard after attack on residents in Swat
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), which has been campaigning for an end to the "abusive" practice, says its past investigations had revealed the bulls were treated with utmost cruelty.
PHOTO: AFP
"Their tails were bitten, twisted, and yanked to force them to run towards the menacing crowd," it said in a report last year.
"Panicked bulls fled onto village streets, injuring onlookers and even goring some to death."
PHOTO: AFP
Dozens of young men were injured on the first day of a traditional bull-taming festival in southern India that activists say is dangerous for both humans and animals.
The sport is extremely popular in rural pockets of Tamil Nadu, where every year hundreds of young men try to hold the hump of the beasts and run, as spectators cheer raucously at events held across the state.
On the opening day of the festival on Thursday, more than 20 men were injured in the city of Madurai as over 600 men wrestled with as many bulls, officials told local media.
A female spectator was also injured when a bull hit her near the exit to a venue, the Press Trust of India reported.
Images showed men in colourful jerseys trying to grab the bulls who swayed their long horns and gnarled in fury.
In past years, competitors had been gored to death.
India's Supreme Court had outlawed the sport in 2014 after a plea by animal rights groups.
However, the sport was reinstated in 2017 after days of massive protests, following which the Tamil Nadu government stepped in and declared bull taming was a part of the state's culture and identity.
Locals shoot dead leopard after attack on residents in Swat
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), which has been campaigning for an end to the "abusive" practice, says its past investigations had revealed the bulls were treated with utmost cruelty.
"Their tails were bitten, twisted, and yanked to force them to run towards the menacing crowd," it said in a report last year.
"Panicked bulls fled onto village streets, injuring onlookers and even goring some to death."