Activists against bullfighting disrupt pope's audience

Europe
By AFP | Aug 08, 2024

Activists of the NGO for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) wearing t-shirts Stop Blessing Corridas rise posters reading 'bullfighting is a sin' during Pope Francis weekly general audience on August 7, 2024 at Paul-VI hall in The Vatican. [AFP]

Animal rights activists briefly interrupted Pope Francis' weekly audience at the Vatican on Wednesday, holding up signs demanding an end to bullfighting.

Two activists from PETA, an international charity which defends animal rights, shouted slogans just as the audience got underway, before being escorted out.

The pair were briefly detained by Vatican security and Italian police, before being released, PETA said.

"Bullfighting is a sin", read the signs in English and Italian, while the activists' T-shirts read "Stop blessing corridas".

"Corridas", or bullfights, are a controversial tradition practised in Spain and several Latin American countries as well as in parts of southern France and Portugal.

Each year, thousands of bulls are slaughtered in bullrings around the world, according to PETA.

Wednesday's protest was one of several over the past couple of years calling for a stand against bullfighting from the Argentinian pope. In a 2015 treatise, he wrote that "every act of cruelty towards any creature is 'contrary to human dignity'".

In the 16th century, Pope Pius V banned bullfights as "cruel" and contrary to "Christian piety and charity".

But Catholic priests still officiate at religious ceremonies in bullfights and minister to bullfighters in chapels built inside arenas, PETA said.

While considered a venerated cultural tradition in Spain, bullfighting is a blood sport involving taunting and stabbing the bull before killing it.

Men on horseback first lance the bull in the neck, then others attempt to plant sharp sticks into its shoulders.

The matador then confronts the weakened, confused bull, engaging it in a series of passes with his cape before performing a fatal sword thrust between the shoulders to kill it.

It often takes multiple stabs to finally kill the animal.

Colombia's president last month enacted a law banning bullfighting, which will come into force from 2027.

Other Latin American countries that have outlawed bullfighting include Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Guatemala and Uruguay.

Share this story
Robertson to leave Liverpool at end of season
Andy Robertson will bring down the curtain on his nine-year career at Liverpool at the end of the season, the faltering Premier League champions announced on Thursday
Angola name former Senegal boss Cisse as new coach
The Angolan football federation said Thursday it had hired Senegalese Africa Cup of Nations winner Aliou Cisse as the new head coach of the national team.
School Games: Ng'iya, Kisumu Day make semis as national hockey champs Tigoi bow out
Nyanza Region champions Ng’iya Girls and Kisumu Day are through to the semifinals of the Brookside National Secondary School Term One games
School Games: Kakamega face Upper Hill as Yala renew rivalry with Kisii in rugby
Kakamega High School will face off with Upper Hill in the Brookside National Secondary School rugby 15s semifinals on Friday, as St Mary’s School Yala renew their rivalry with Kisii School.
School Games: Newbies St Mary's Yala make semis as Butere to face Barchando
St Mary’s Yala finished top of Group B after seeing off Friends School Kamusinga 74-72 to make the last four on Thursday at Kisumu Polytechnic Grounds.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS