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Charging bulls injure five at Spain’s Pamplona fiesta

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Half-tonne fighting bulls crashed into and trampled thrill-seeking runners as they raced down the cobblestone streets of Pamplona in northern Spain on Thursday, injuring five men, officials said.

A 595-kilo (1,310-pound) black bull called "Jubilado", or "Retired", sped ahead of a pack of six bulls, and charged runners before slipping and falling on a group of daredevils.

An isolated bull is more dangerous because it can become disoriented and more likely to attack.

Runners, many wearing traditional white clothes with red neck scarves, collided into each other or pushed one another out of the way as the galloping animals neared.

"There was a lot of panic this morning. I jumped over six people today," said Peter Milligan, a 44-year-old lawyer from New Jersey in the United States who took part in the run with his brother and 18-year-old son.

"One of the bulls hit me in the back with its nose and then ran off. The whole time my son was running a couple of steps ahead of me."

Runners wearing traditional white clothes and red neck scarves jostle with one another as the gallop...
Runners wearing traditional white clothes and red neck scarves jostle with one another as the galloping bulls approach
Miguel Riopa, AFP

No-one was gored but five Spanish men between the ages of 27 and 58 were taken to hospital for injuries to the head, knees or elbows, the regional government of Navarra said in a statement. None of the injuries were serious.

- 'Noticed a little blood' -

The bulls from the Los Victoriano del Rio ranch near Madrid took just two minutes and 27 seconds to cover the 846.6-metre (925-yard) course from a pen to the city's bull ring, where they will face matadors and certain death in the afternoon.

San Fermin Festival-goers run in front of Victoriano del Rio Cortes' bulls during the third &qu...
San Fermin Festival-goers run in front of Victoriano del Rio Cortes' bulls during the third "encierro" (bull-run) in Pamplona, northern Spain, on July 9, 2015
Ander Gillenea, AFP

Just before the herd arrived in the ring one man grabbed the horn of the lead bull, causing other runners to fall. Touching the bulls is forbidden.

It was the third of eight scheduled runs.

A 27-year-old man from Brisbane, Australia, was gored in the groin and thigh in Pamplona bull ring at the end of the second run on Wednesday. Two Americans and a Briton were gored in the first run on Tuesday.

"I tripped and fell backward and a bull got me right in the armpit. I got up, noticed a little blood. I looked under my shirt and noticed a hole," said one of the Americans who was gored on Tuesday, Mike Webster, a married father of two.

The 38-year-old occupational therapist from Gainesville, Florida, has been taking part in San Fermin for the past 11 years and it was his 38th bull run anywhere in the world -- but he said it would be his last.

"I made an agreement with my wife that if I got injured I would stop and watch," he said.

A participant limbers up before for the start of the third
A participant limbers up before for the start of the third "encierro" (bull-run) of the San Fermin Festival in Pamplona, northern Spain, on July 9, 2015
Miguel Riopa, AFP

Fifteen people have been killed in the bull runs since modern-day records started in 1911. The most recent fatality was in 2009 when a bull gored a 27-year-old Spaniard in the neck, heart and lungs.

Last year just over 17,000 people joined the festival's eight daily bull runs with over half of them, 56 percent, coming from abroad, according to Pamplona city hall.

The United States accounted for 24 percent of all foreign bull run participants, Australia and New Zealand accounted for 11 percent and Britain for four percent.

Half-tonne fighting bulls crashed into and trampled thrill-seeking runners as they raced down the cobblestone streets of Pamplona in northern Spain on Thursday, injuring five men, officials said.

A 595-kilo (1,310-pound) black bull called “Jubilado”, or “Retired”, sped ahead of a pack of six bulls, and charged runners before slipping and falling on a group of daredevils.

An isolated bull is more dangerous because it can become disoriented and more likely to attack.

Runners, many wearing traditional white clothes with red neck scarves, collided into each other or pushed one another out of the way as the galloping animals neared.

“There was a lot of panic this morning. I jumped over six people today,” said Peter Milligan, a 44-year-old lawyer from New Jersey in the United States who took part in the run with his brother and 18-year-old son.

“One of the bulls hit me in the back with its nose and then ran off. The whole time my son was running a couple of steps ahead of me.”

Runners wearing traditional white clothes and red neck scarves jostle with one another as the gallop...

Runners wearing traditional white clothes and red neck scarves jostle with one another as the galloping bulls approach
Miguel Riopa, AFP

No-one was gored but five Spanish men between the ages of 27 and 58 were taken to hospital for injuries to the head, knees or elbows, the regional government of Navarra said in a statement. None of the injuries were serious.

– ‘Noticed a little blood’ –

The bulls from the Los Victoriano del Rio ranch near Madrid took just two minutes and 27 seconds to cover the 846.6-metre (925-yard) course from a pen to the city’s bull ring, where they will face matadors and certain death in the afternoon.

San Fermin Festival-goers run in front of Victoriano del Rio Cortes' bulls during the third &qu...

San Fermin Festival-goers run in front of Victoriano del Rio Cortes' bulls during the third “encierro” (bull-run) in Pamplona, northern Spain, on July 9, 2015
Ander Gillenea, AFP

Just before the herd arrived in the ring one man grabbed the horn of the lead bull, causing other runners to fall. Touching the bulls is forbidden.

It was the third of eight scheduled runs.

A 27-year-old man from Brisbane, Australia, was gored in the groin and thigh in Pamplona bull ring at the end of the second run on Wednesday. Two Americans and a Briton were gored in the first run on Tuesday.

“I tripped and fell backward and a bull got me right in the armpit. I got up, noticed a little blood. I looked under my shirt and noticed a hole,” said one of the Americans who was gored on Tuesday, Mike Webster, a married father of two.

The 38-year-old occupational therapist from Gainesville, Florida, has been taking part in San Fermin for the past 11 years and it was his 38th bull run anywhere in the world — but he said it would be his last.

“I made an agreement with my wife that if I got injured I would stop and watch,” he said.

A participant limbers up before for the start of the third

A participant limbers up before for the start of the third “encierro” (bull-run) of the San Fermin Festival in Pamplona, northern Spain, on July 9, 2015
Miguel Riopa, AFP

Fifteen people have been killed in the bull runs since modern-day records started in 1911. The most recent fatality was in 2009 when a bull gored a 27-year-old Spaniard in the neck, heart and lungs.

Last year just over 17,000 people joined the festival’s eight daily bull runs with over half of them, 56 percent, coming from abroad, according to Pamplona city hall.

The United States accounted for 24 percent of all foreign bull run participants, Australia and New Zealand accounted for 11 percent and Britain for four percent.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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