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Three bull-runners gored at opening of Pamplona festival | |
(35 minutes later) | |
Three men have been gored and 10 others injured on the first day of the San Fermín festival in Pamplona, where bulls chase runners in red scarves through the streets. | |
Related: 'We're a violent nation' – director tackles Spain's festival culture of animal cruelty | Related: 'We're a violent nation' – director tackles Spain's festival culture of animal cruelty |
Tuesday’s run included six animals from the Jandilla ranch in Spain’s rural western region of Extremadura, known for the ferocity of its bulls. | |
The run lasted two minutes and 23 seconds. One man who was gored in the chest was in a stable condition, a doctor at the event said. The Red Cross said two other men were gored, one in the back, but gave no further details. Ten others have been taken to hospital. | |
Many Spanish towns hold festivals involving bulls during the summer. San Fermín is the most famous internationally and attracts thousands of revellers, many from abroad. | Many Spanish towns hold festivals involving bulls during the summer. San Fermín is the most famous internationally and attracts thousands of revellers, many from abroad. |
Related: Pamplona's San Fermín festival begins – in pictures | Related: Pamplona's San Fermín festival begins – in pictures |
The week-long festival has attracted increasing criticism from animal rights groups – on Saturday, activists from Peta staged a protest to draw attention to what they say is a week of fear and death for bulls. | |
San Fermín featured in Ernest Hemingway’s novel The Sun Also Rises. Its daily bull run starts at 8am and usually lasts between three and five minutes. There are eight runs in total. |