WASHINGTON,D.C.-Wearing masks and brandishing signs in the colors of India’s flag that proclaim, “India: Keep the Ban on Cruel Jallikattu & Bull Racing,” half a dozen PETA “bulls” gathered outside the High Commission of India on Sept 15.The action came as special-interest groups attempt to overturn the Indian Supreme Court’s recent confirmation that bullfights, bull races, and jallikattu violate India’s Prevention...
of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960. “Videos from these events show terrified bulls as they’re chased, kicked, punched, jumped on, dragged to the ground, and stabbed. During races, they’re hit with nail-studded sticks and pushed beyond the point of exhaustion. In bullfights, they’re stabbed and a round ends only when one animal is killed or manages to flee, invariably injured,”said PETA.
“India must not roll back the clock and allow bulls to be tormented and killed to amuse a screaming crowd,”says PETA US President Ingrid Newkirk,who is also the founder of PETA India. “The world is watching and hoping that the government of India will do the right thing by keeping these dangerous and cruel spectacles illegal.” PETA – whose motto reads,in part,that “animals are not ours to use for entertainment” and its affiliates will also hold anti-jallikattu demonstrations at Indian embassies in Canada and elsewhere around the world.
“India must not roll back the clock and allow bulls to be tormented and killed to amuse a screaming crowd,”says PETA US President Ingrid Newkirk,who is also the founder of PETA India. “The world is watching and hoping that the government of India will do the right thing by keeping these dangerous and cruel spectacles illegal.” PETA – whose motto reads,in part,that “animals are not ours to use for entertainment” and its affiliates will also hold anti-jallikattu demonstrations at Indian embassies in Canada and elsewhere around the world.