Inside sickening animal slaughter festivals
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More than a 1,000 dogs were brutally killed as part of the Yulin Dog Meat Festival last month – but the controversial event is far from the only one around the world.


Yulin Dog Meat Festival
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Adult dogs were sold for £100 to be boiled in soups and stews
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The Sun revealed the horrors inside a "secret dog kill farm", which supplied 'meat' to the 10-day festival in Guangxi, China, that celebrates the summer solstice.

Puppies and older canines were believed to be either boiled alive or beaten to death before their fur was burned off with a blow-torch – ahead of being consumed.

Humane Society International estimate between 10 and 20 million dogs are killed for meat in China each year.


Inside one of the canine kill farms that supplied meat to Yulin Dog Meat Festival
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After being boiled alive (right), the dogs were fur was burned off with a blowtorch
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Here are the other barbaric events where animals are tortured and butchered for celebrations.



Bull horns set on fire


Toro Júbilo, dubbed “fire bull” festival, takes place in Medinaceli, Spain, in the second week of November, each year.

The ancient tradition was described as a symbolic ritual that marked the end of the nation's 800-year occupation by the Moors, which ended in 1492.

As part of the celebration, a bull is tied down before having balls of tar placed on top of its horn and set alight.


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Participants hold the bull (right) and ignite the flammable material on its head
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Quote:PETA describes how the “terrified” animal is then released to “run around in a blind terror... while merciless thugs cheer at his agony".

Quote:Ms Bekhechi of PETA told The Sun: "The panicked animal can do nothing but charge around the square, smashing into walls in an attempt to put out the flames,"

Organizers claimed the bull has mud smothered over its head to reduce any pain – but the animal rights groups say the animal's "sensitive horns, eyes and other body parts" are at risk.

Quote:Online PETA branded the event a “sadistic ritual” and “a horrific spectacle that must be banned altogether”.

Toro Júbilo, also known as Toro de Fuego, was not allowed to take place last year due to Covid-19 restrictions.



Pig blood for 'good luck'


Each year, residents of Nem Thuong, a village near Vietnam’s capital Hanoi, carry out a ceremonial slaughtering for ‘good luck’.

The event, which is 800 years old, celebrates General Doan Thuong – who according to legend, killed two wild hogs to feed soldiers fighting off invaders.

Ahead of the day, two pigs are taken care of by local households before being bathed and dyed red for the ceremony.


Two screaming pigs are tied down 'spread eagle' and have their throats slit
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The executioner brands a large ceremonial machete
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Attendees dip their money in pig blood in the hope it will bring good luck
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On the day, the animals are "tied-up and paraded through the streets" alongside their executioner, who carries a large blade.

Quote:The pigs are “strapped down, spread-eagle” and "can be heard screaming as their throat is slit and locals dip money in its blood for 'good luck'", according to PETA.

But after a crackdown by Vietnamese authorities, the killings now take place in an enclosed courtyard away from public view and no longer are the pigs chopped in half.



World’s ‘largest animal sacrifice’ fest


Gadhimai Festival in Nepal is a two-day festival that happens once every five years.


One man lines up to attempt to decapitate a bull with a machete
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The event, which is a celebration observed by some Hindus, was last held in 2019 – despite animal sacrifices being outlawed four years earlier.

Animal Equality estimated that 3,203 buffalos were killed as well as goats, chickens, pigeons and other livestock.

Footage taken by the animal rights group alleged many of the men were “intoxicated” and had “no previous experience”.

This meant many of the animals were not decapitated immediately, which prolonging their suffering.

One-by-one buffaloes were shown being “hacked to death” by worshippers wielding machetes before moving onto other creatures.

At the height of the festival’s popularity in 2009, around 500,000 animals were slaughtered according to Humane Society International.


Animal Equality believed around 3,200 buffaloes-alone were slaughtered in 2019
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Estimates from 2014, believe there were between 30,000 and 200,000 animals slaughtered.



Animal piñatas & decapitated ducks


Kots Kaal Pato, which translates as the “dance of the strangled duck”, was a festival that ran in Citilcum, Mexico, until 2016.

The event was held in honor of Saint Bartolo and was incorrectly believed to bring about the rainy season - before it was banned in 2016.

The longstanding April celebration saw animals being slaughtered in unusual and cruel ways.

According to Vice, iguanas, possums and other “vermin” were captured by children and put into a piñata.

Attendees then took it in turns to pummel the toy – which contained the live animals – with a wooden rod.

Any creatures that were able to “escape the festive deathtrap” were chased by locals and then trampled to death.

In another shocking display, a duck was tied up with rope and suspended from a wooden structure, ready for people to try to grab the bird.

Vice reported “contestants clambering over each other” and jumping to reach it – the event ended after the bird’s head was ripped from its body. 


Men fight to be the first to pull the duck down from a suspended piece of rope
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The men climb over one another as they try to yank off the duck's head
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Children and adults beat piñatas with iguanas, opossums and other 'vermin'
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Bulls suffocated in '20-min torture fest'


Umkhosi Ukweshwama is a coming of age celebration in South Africa where young men chase a bull around an enclosure and kill it.

According to The National, it can take more than 20 minutes for the animal to die – typically by being smothered, strangled or having its neck broken.



Bulls darted & stabbed


Toro de la Vega, in Spain, is now banned but previously saw one young bull being tortured and killed as part of a medieval tournament that dated back to the 16th century.

The animal would be struck with darts, stabbed with spears and had its tail cut-off before being killed as part of a 500-year-old traditional event.


Toro de la Vega has been banned after petitioning from animal rights groups and the public
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The bull was chased by men with spears and other weapons and killed
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The individual who landed the final killing blow would be awarded a ceremonial spear and medal.

In 2019, Spain’s Supreme Court rejected an appeal to overturn a ban that prohibited the slaughter of bulls as part of the festival.

While killing is no longer permitted, organizers are allowed to let the riled-up and distressed animal charge through the streets.

The council’s rejected appeal argued there were “40,000 fans” of the event “compared to 100 animal activists” who opposed it.

PETA celebrated the ban of the event and commended 100 other towns in Spain for banning bullfighting.



Oxen ‘beaten, stabbed & blinded with hot pepper’


Farra do Boi, which means ‘Festival of the Ox’, used to run from February up until Easter before it was banned in Brazil in 1997.

The event, which led to the painful death of "countless oxen", allegedly still goes on in some parts of the country, according to animal rights activists.

Quote:PETA reported animals are starved before being “chased, punched, kicked and beaten” with an array of weapons including “knives, wipes, stones and ropes”.

Shockingly, they allege oxen’s eyes are “rubbed with hot pepper and gouged out” – others are reportedly “doused with gasoline and set on fire”.



https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/15347788/a...-dog-meat/
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