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In defence of bulls and wild birds

bullfightingAnti-bullfighting campaigners are planning their biggest public protest outside the Albufeira bullring in opposition to what is expected to be one of the country’s most attended bullfighting events of the year.

The campaigners have unveiled a huge billboard by the side of the N125 between Boliquieme and Albufeira proclaiming in Portuguese and English: “Bullfighting = shameful torture. We demand abolition!”  

The organisers are hoping as many protesters as possible of various nationalities will come together for a peaceful demonstration scheduled to start at 8.30pm next Friday (August 22).

Police are likely to be on hand to ensure that no one outside the ring comes to any harm - unlike the animals inside it.

In addition to wanting bullfighting abolished nationwide, one of the concerns of the protesters is what they claim is the failure of the security authorities to uphold the law in regard to under-age children being admitted to bullfights.

Isabel Searle, a founder member of Cidade de Albufeira Anti Touradas (CAAT), says their group have repeatedly asked why the Inspeção-Geral das Atividades Culturais (IGAC) are “doing nothing” to stop children under 12-year-olds being allowed into bullfights.
“They have ignored us,” she said.

Both the United Nations and the European Commission have expressed concern in the past about the possible affects of bullfight violence on child spectators.

On the other hand, many generations of young people have witnessed bullfights in Portugal and Spain and many today would claim they have not been traumatised or emotionally affected by the experience.

The CAAT group have written to the president of the Albufeira Câmara asking him to look into safety aspects of the bullring building, which they claim has badly deteriorated over the years.

“The Câmara president has ignored us as well. We are simply not being given answers,” said Ms Searle.

Those in favour of bullfighting believe it to be a traditional art form, a deeply-rooted integral part of Iberian culture steeped in ritualistic grace and confidence in mastering the bull.

“Bullfighting is the only art in which the artist is in danger of death and in which the degree of brilliance in the performance is left to the fighter’s honour,” wrote Ernest Hemingway.

Appalled by such notions, opponents see bullfights as an outmoded and cruel form of entertainment, mainly for holidaymakers, mostly from the UK and elsewhere in northern Europe where animal cruelty is generally outlawed. bullfightposter

 

 

*  Protesters will meet at the roundabout of Corcovada in the parking lot opposite Roberto´s chicken restaurant at 8pm and then march the 50 metres to the bullring at 8.30pm.

 

 As with bullfighting, the shooting and trapping of wild birds is entrenched in the culture of Portugal. A new hunting season has just started. The following is an extract from the e-book People in a Place Apart.

«Most at risk are migratory species that pass through southern Europe in vast numbers on their way to and from wintering grounds in Africa. Among the Mediterranean countries, Malta, Italy and Cyprus are probably the worst offenders in terms of sheer numbers of birds killed, but Portugal, especially the Algarve, is not far behind, according to Dr Colin Key, a resident ornithologist and strong advocate of greater protection.

Traditionally, wild birds were shot by the poor in Portugal to put food on the table. Now it is sport. Although there are regulations on where and when hunting is allowed and what species may be killed, the regulations are often ignored. Attitudes are undoubtedly changing as a result of the spread of information and enthusiasm about wildlife, especially among the young. “Hunting with guns and dogs is now the preserve of the middle-aged and older generations.

Also, Portugal is now ‘on the map’ for visiting foreign birdwatchers, especially the British, and this has lead to an awareness of the value of ecotourism. The situation is improving, but it is a slow process. The cultural aspects of killing wildlife, whether for food or sport, will take at least another generation to grow out.” »

The hunting season runs from mid-August to the end of February but is restricted to Sundays, Thursdays and national holidays.

© Len Port 2014

_______

Algarve-based, Len Port, has been a journalist for 50 years, working as a staff reporter, broadcaster and freelance correspondent for many leading news organisations. He covered events in the Far east in the Sixties, and in Northern Ireland and South Africa in the Seventies.

Since moving to Portugal in the early Eighties, he has edited regional magazines, contributed to national dailies in Britain and written several books, two of which are currently available as ebooks with Amazon.

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Comments  

+1 #4 PeterD 2014-08-20 10:11
Quoting Peter Booker:
It is the hunters who play the biggest part in caring for erstwhile farmland which is now abandoned, and they protect housing in the countryside to the benefit of everyone.


It is the hunters who make large areas of the countryside a no-go zone on three days of the week. Much of the killing is unnecessary or illegal or both.
0 #3 Peter Booker 2014-08-19 09:00
In my youth I too witnessed a Spanish bullfight and was disgusted by it. The Portuguese version is of course delightfully different, and I admire the horses and horsemanship of its practitioners. I like the fact that Portuguese take their young children to these spectacles - it is a part of family life and family experience which we northerners no longer practice. In Spain, you would never see anything like the bold daring of the forcados amadores, as the bull in Portugal gets a chance to repay the damage done to him. I see no link between financial malpractice and bullfighting in Greece and Italy, nor in Spain and Portugal. I live in Portugal partly because of the differences between my background and the Portuguese way of life, and responsible hunting is a way of life here as well as in Britain. It is the hunters who play the biggest part in caring for erstwhile farmland which is now abandoned, and they protect housing in the countryside to the benefit of everyone.
+3 #2 Marvyn 2014-08-18 16:28
Excellent piece above, unexpected but welcome ...

it is these backward bull fighting countries that are holding back the full implementation of the EU law on 'sentient beings' ... but then oddly enough these are amongst those countries holding back the EU's economic development (ref: the joke BES bank supervision !!) and the EU's possibility of ever being more than hot air.

Presumably a link ???
+4 #1 RCK 2014-08-18 10:57
Seeing as our great European masters can abolish anything they want to, including the wrong shaped fruit, why oh why do they allow this grotesque medieval animal torture to continue. I attended a bullfight in Spain many years ago as a young naive tourist. The word "fight" is totally misleading of course. More like about 15 men with sharp weapons systematically bating, torturing, seriously injuring and reducing a once fine strong animal to a defenceless wreck, before the "brave" matador then steps in and puts the poor suffering bull out of it's misery - sometimes not until the second or third bungled attempt, causing further unimaginable pain and suffering to the poor animal to jeers from the crowd. It was horrible. The whole obscene ritual disgusted me then, and still disgusts me now. Shame on Portugal for allowing it. There is no place for this shameful "entertainment" in today's society. I wish the protesters well

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