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China hosts bullfights; no animals killed
China's first Spanish bullfights Saturday went well for the bulls — none were killed in the ring.
The fights, complete with Spanish matadors and fighting bulls imported from Mexico, drew several hundred curious spectators to a bullring inside a soccer stadium in Shanghai's northern suburbs.
Bulls were taunted, pricked with skewers and stabbed with spears but then were ushered out of the ring before any death blows were delivered.
"In keeping with Chinese cultural sensitivities, the bulls will not be killed," said a broadcaster speaking over the public address system at Yangpu Stadium.
White towels were passed out for spectators to wave, the traditional Spanish signal for the matador to spare the bull. But no word was given on the animals' ultimate fates.
"It's really something different," said city government worker Yu Liang, before calling, "Be careful!" as a bull made another pass at matador Guillermo Alban.
Eight bulls were imported for the fights at a cost of more than $120,000.
The bullfights add to a list of sometimes bizarre spectacles organized to build Shanghai's image as a vibrant, cosmopolitan city and to take advantage of the rising incomes of its citizens — already the highest in China.
Recent high-profile events have included China's first Formula One race, an Italian festival featuring a five-story-high replica of the Leaning Tower of Pisa and parachute jumps off the city's tallest skyscraper. |
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