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Famed Pamplona bull-running festival ends with 8 goring victims

China Daily | Updated: 2019-07-16 09:59
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A reveler is about to be gored during the running of the bulls at the San Fermin festival in Pamplona, Spain, on Sunday. SUSANA VERA/REUTERS

PAMPLONA, Spain - Thousands of revelers raised candles and red scarves in the air and swayed back and forth as they sang a mournful song to mark the end on Sunday of Spain's famous annual bull-running festival, which saw eight daredevils gored this year.

"Poor me, poor me, the San Fermin fiesta has come to an end," the crowd sang just after the stroke of midnight in front of city hall in the Plaza Consistorial as fireworks lit up the sky.

"People of Pamplona, the San Fermin festival is over, the best festival in the world," Pamplona Mayor Enrique Maya said from the balcony of city hall to cheers from the crowd just before the singing began.

The nine-day San Fermin festival, which dates back to medieval times, features concerts, religious processions, folk dancing, and round-the-clock drinking.

But the highlight is a bracing, daily test of courage against a thundering pack of half-ton, sharp-horned bulls.

Each morning hundreds of runners, many dressed in white with red scarves and sashes, test their valor by sprinting with six half-ton bulls along an 875-meter course that winds through the narrow streets of this northern city.

The most daring try to run as long as they can right in front of the beasts' horns before veering off to the side or diving under the wooden barriers that separate the bulls and runners from the thousands of spectators from around the world that line the route.

Two Australians, aged 27 and 30, as well as a 25-year-old Spaniard, were gored during the final bull run of the festival on Sunday by a half-ton fighting bull which became separated from the pack moments into the run and began charging people in its way, regional health authorities said.

The three men suffered injuries to the armpit, arm and leg from the bull's horns.

Isolated bulls are more likely to get disoriented and start charging at people. That brought to eight the total number of runners who were gored by a bull during this year's fiesta.

At the end of the festival's first run, a bull ran over and sunk one of its horns deep in the neck of a 46-year-old lawyer from San Francisco, Jaime Alvarez, narrowly missing key arteries.

He was injured as he was trying to take a video-selfie with his mobile phone.

"It was like a truck or car just hitting me in the side of the head. I put my hand on my neck and I saw blood," he told US television from a Pamplona hospital.

He was released from hospital two days later.

A 23-year-old US citizen from Kentucky and a 40-year-old Spaniard were also gored that day.

In addition to the eight men who were gored, another 27 people were taken to a hospital for broken bones and bruises suffered during the bull runs.

About 500 more people were treated at the scene for more minor injuries, according to the Red Cross.

The festival, made famous worldwide by Ernest Hemingway's 1926 novel The Sun Also Rises, claims scores of casualties every year, although last year just two men were gored.

Sixteen people have been killed in the bull runs since records started in 1911.

The last death was in 2009 when a bull gored a 27-year-old Spaniard in the neck, heart and lungs.

The bulls face almost certain death in bullfights following the runs, and earlier this month animal welfare activists staged a "die-in" demonstration in the streets of the city to protest the tradition.

Agencies

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