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Man killed and Briton hurt in Pamplona bull run

By Joe Sinclair and Rosa Silverman, Press Association

The Jandilla fighting bull "Capuchino" gores a runner during the fourth bull run of the San Fermin festival in Pamplona on 10 July  2009

REUTERS/Susana Vera

The Jandilla fighting bull "Capuchino" gores a runner during the fourth bull run of the San Fermin festival in Pamplona on 10 July 2009

A Briton was among the injured today after a rogue bull gored several runners at Spain's Pamplona festival, leaving one man dead.

Daniel Jimeno Romero, 27, from Madrid, became the first person to be gored to death at the event in nearly 15 years when he was cornered by the bull.

And a 20-year-old man from London was one of six victims still being treated in hospital after he was gored in the left thigh by the animal, according to Spanish authorities.

A 61-year-old American who suffered serious injuries was also being treated in intensive care.

Mr Romero was gored in the neck after one of six bulls on the half-mile course separated from the pack, becoming frightened and aggressive.

Soon after the incident a man was pictured lying on a stretcher with his face and neck stained with blood and his eyes half-open.

Comedian Andy Smart, who was taking part in his 52nd run, witnessed the events.

He saw the brown bull, called Cappuccino and weighing 1,130lb, as it began to cause havoc.

He said: "This morning was quite hairy. The bulls were very fast.

"They are bred to be short and stocky and fast and they were flying.

"They must have been doing about 30kmh when they passed me.

"They go through the crowd like a knife through butter."

He said Cappuccino attacked two American men right in front of him about a third of the way along the course.

"It caught one of them and then stopped and went back to try and gore him.

"One of the men had blood on his head where he had banged it on the cobble stones. The other one was winded. I think he was trodden on by another runner."

Mr Smart, 50, from Portsmouth, continued along the course where he saw a man believed to be Mr Romero lying on the floor.

"When I got up to that point there was a lot of medical attention being given to him.

"There were about 20 Red Cross people around him.

"He didn't look good. There was a woman holding something to his neck."

The bull left runners scrambling for cover as it charged right and left.

At one point it picked a man up with its horns and flipped him into the air.

The bull kept after him as he lay curled up on the ground, covering his face.

But the man got up and ran away and was apparently not seriously hurt.

Mr Smart, a regular with the Comedy Store Players, added: "I love the sport of bull fighting. I love the adrenaline rush.

"To me it's an incredible art form to watch a man fight a bull.

"I've been doing it since 1982 so I know what I'm doing.

"But a lot of people don't realise how dangerous it is. They seem to think it's just a laugh but it's incredibly dangerous."

Fifteen people have now died at the Fiesta of San Fermin in northern Spain since record-keeping began in 1924.

This was the the first fatal goring at the event since 1995 when 22-year-old American Matthew Tassio was killed.

In 2003 63-year-old Pamplona native Fermin Etxeberri died after he was trampled on the head.

Speaking after today's incident, herder Humberto Miguel said: "It was a light bull. Its charges were not particularly strong but it moved very fast from left to right.

"Of the whole pack, it was the one that gave us the most trouble."

The six bulls used today came from a ranch called Jandilla and have a fierce reputation.

They hold the record for the most gorings in a single run - eight on a day in 2004.

The animals tend to keep running if they stay in a pack but incidents can occur if one gets separated and frightened.

The festival was made famous by writer Ernest Hemingway in his novel The Sun Also Rises.

It attracts thousands of foreign tourists each year, with many choosing to take part.

Mr Smart was injured himself in 1985 when a bull tossed him 12ft in the air, breaking two of his ribs and bruising his kidneys.

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volenti non fit injuria
[info]vhawk1951 wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 07:59 am (UTC)
bound to happen I suppose, but he died happy
Barbaric!!
[info]smarttog wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 08:04 am (UTC)
I know it is a traditional event in Spain as is bull fighting.

We used to do bull and bear baiting in England but both those "sports" where banned centuries ago.
People also used to hunt wild animals with packs of dogs, happily that "sport" was also recently banned.

Treating any animals with cruelty is no longer defensible as a sport in the modern civilized world.

It is absolutely shamefully that the rest of the European Union has not insisted that Spain abandon such cruel sports.

Re: Barbaric!!
[info]jb1981 wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 08:48 am (UTC)
Why would the European Union ban bull fighting when every country that constitutes it still actively farms animals for meat production? Bull fighting bulls are reared in a wild and natural environment, and while they come to an admittedly grizzly end, their life has been a comparative paradise compared to the squalid, confined and miserable life of the millions of animals which you and I continue to conveniently buy from the supermarket.
I, like you, wish, hope and pray for a Utopian world where no animal is made to suffer in the name of sport or consumerism, but in the brutal world in which we live, the bulls which will one day shed their blood in the bull rings of Spain are, in fact, the lucky ones.
JB
Re: Barbaric!! - [info]wax0 - Friday, 10 July 2009 at 08:49 am (UTC) Expand
[info]mickey_modster wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 08:04 am (UTC)
One less stupid, ignorant person on the planet......
Good
[info]rants_a_lot wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 08:07 am (UTC)
One for the bull.
Just desserts?
[info]alecpatrick wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 09:08 am (UTC)
Is it just me or do others struggle to muster any sympathy for these guys?
It seems bizarre that a supposedly civilized country can continue to encourage this kind of cruelty (or is that overstating it?) to bulls. The whole idea of the Pamplona bull run, the race to the sea when being chased by bulls, bull fights etc just seem very, well, primitive. I'm not a great animal lover or anything but I do feel these "events" show a real lack of respect for the beasts, and as such, Spanish "culture" diminishes itself by continuing to support them.
What about the bull
[info]respectedgraham wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 09:41 am (UTC)
Should we be surprised when the bull fights back
[info]giulliana1 wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 09:43 am (UTC)
Karma
One Less Cretin
[info]mishmos wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 09:44 am (UTC)
I guess it is natures way of weeding out the stupid.
is it necessary?
[info]ebbi581 wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 10:46 am (UTC)
is this necessary? is it necessary to do such stupid acts? has life become so much boring for some of us to risk our lives in this manner?? i do not see why while there are so many rules and regulations for the most trivial things but running with the one ton bulls is considered safe and there are idiots who see this as fun!!!!
Load of bull
[info]rustyjust wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 10:53 am (UTC)
No sympathy. Wouldn't want the festival to be retracted. At least the bulls are given a chance to get their own back before being slaughtered.

rustyjust
No sympathy
[info]guv111 wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 11:03 am (UTC)
It may sound harsh in the light of someone's death, but I have no sympathy for the idiots who take part in Spain's moronic obsession with cruelty. If he hadn't been there in the first place, antagonising the animal along with all the other mindless cretins, he would have been aliove today. If the European Union has any real power, it should make a point of ridding the continent of these "runs" and bull fighting. Spain needs to advance and leave these medieval practices behind.
Man gored to death during the running of the bulls at Pamplona
[info]locustman wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 11:03 am (UTC)
Hahaha!

I love it when people get gored to death during the running of the bulls. A hilarious example of poetic justice in action. Also, whatching a bullfighter get dragghed around a ring, screaming with pain, and dying of ther injuries in hospital is much more entertaining than watching the traditional outcome of a bullfight.

Here's to more human fatalities. Hopefully they'll eventually ou8tnumber the bulls killed
No respect for the dead anymore
[info]lkdamo wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 11:08 am (UTC)
Some of you people are cold bastards, a person just died show some respect for pitty sake.
He had a family a friends I would suspect and they deserve some respect too.
You can express your dislike for bull running without picking on dead man
Re: No respect for the dead anymore
[info]freethinkin wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 07:02 pm (UTC)

He is dead! Fantastic!

He chose to torture animals. He got what he deserved.
Re: No respect for the dead anymore - [info]rheinhart1 - Tuesday, 21 July 2009 at 12:34 am (UTC) Expand
Bull run
[info]hem04 wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 11:09 am (UTC)
Great tradition, I hope they keep it alive. At least in Spain health & safety and political correctness have not taking over running the country!
Re: Bull run
[info]acidpen wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 03:32 pm (UTC)
i couldn't agree more
Bravado
[info]robert_hardy wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 11:17 am (UTC)
I suppose we do need to maintain some avenues where risking your life with stupid bravado is acceptable. At least this man died without endangering others. It is much worse when young men try to prove their courage racing their cars at stupid speeds on the highway.
Re: Bravado
[info]anguscoull wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 05:55 pm (UTC)
"At least this man died without endangering others"

This is not the case. All of the bulls which this man was helping to torment are put in danger and often injured during the festival, and they will all be killed in the bullring later on.
[info]chiennoir wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 11:26 am (UTC)
"Treating any animals with cruelty is no longer defensible as a sport in the modern civilized world." Just for the record. many Spanish people do not regard bull-fighting as a sport; they see it as part of their culture, a ritual, something akin to art. And, as others have said, at least the bull has a chance to get its own back before it is slaughtered. I don't think that happens in Britain.
Sick
[info]flexitime2 wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 11:37 am (UTC)
I'm really shocked at the vitriolic response to this guy's death here and on the Times comments. I understand the argument that a bullfighter who gets gored to death had it coming, as he deliberately went into the ring to kill the bull in a clearly unfair "fight", but this is a guy who travelled from Madrid to attend a festival, probably had a good time with his friends drinking the nights away, joined a couple of thousand other people in running with the bulls and who will never be seen alive again by his family.

I can only assume that none of the dozens of people literally rejoicing in this death on said newspaper comments boards eat meat, as that would make them accomplices to the slaying and maltreatment of similar animals.
Albert
[info]doug_piranha wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 11:43 am (UTC)
it seems
bull 1 - idiot 0
seems to be the gernal consensus.

but I knew some berk would bring in racism and whinge and complani about a
mythicla anti-muslim groundswell in Europe. if people were genrally anyti-mulsim -
there would not be some many muslims living in Europe.

how can anyone turn the nonesens of the bull run into a comaplin about perceived racsim.

But it takes the biscuit to call Europeans barabic because we object to women being made to cover up
(and don't give me all the guff about women liking this - and if it is religious
conviction how come the men don't dress the same ? )

stoned anyone lately for committing adultery ?
sex equality
[info]wax0 wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 01:12 pm (UTC)
I want to see men wearing a mini skirt and make up to see how equal treated women and men are in Europe

cheers....
Shame on Spain
[info]bertiebirdman wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 11:52 am (UTC)
Yet another example of Spanish backwardness, their anachronistic claim and persecution of Gibraltar and the Gibraltarians being the other obvious example.
British culture superiority
[info]onthedesk wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 12:08 pm (UTC)
It's much more civilizated kill people (most of them completely inocent) in illegal militar invasions as in Afghanistan and Iraq. How would you feel about people feeling no simpathy for 'stupid British soldiers' killed in Afghanistan? Kind of fed up of British arrogancy and moral superiority complex.
Re: British culture superiority
[info]northernsaddler wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 12:14 pm (UTC)
What a load of rubbish - how on earth are the two related. This pratt got what he deserved.
Re: British culture superiority - [info]onthedesk - Friday, 10 July 2009 at 12:41 pm (UTC) Expand
Re: British culture superiority - [info]doug_piranha - Friday, 10 July 2009 at 04:30 pm (UTC) Expand
Re: British culture superiority - [info]onthedesk - Friday, 10 July 2009 at 08:22 pm (UTC) Expand
Re: British culture superiority - [info]whiterabbi7 - Friday, 10 July 2009 at 11:59 pm (UTC) Expand
Re: British culture superiority - [info]onthedesk - Saturday, 11 July 2009 at 01:56 am (UTC) Expand
Serves him right
[info]arcane_af wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 12:14 pm (UTC)
If primitive, macho idiots with little or no inner life insist of running with bulls, then I have no sympathy with them when it goes wring with them, and I by no means include the whole Spanish people in this group of morons.
Until we ban fox hunting properly
[info]kuma2000 wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 12:54 pm (UTC)
We do not have the moral high ground to criticise Spain: I assume the fruits of those bulls end up on some restaurant table or some dudes feet, while Basil Brush dies to massages the ego of Lord Duckly-Pond or some such irrelevant toff. Supposedly we have banned it but it does not seem to have stopped it.
Which has the smaller brain?
[info]temujin99 wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 01:03 pm (UTC)
I really enjoy it when some stupid small brain gets gored by the bull. They take the risk they must pay the consequences.
Cultural chauvinism
[info]chiennoir wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 01:06 pm (UTC)
Why do the Brits have so much of a cultural superiority-complex? I lived in Spain for 5 years and I loved it. There are aspects of Spanish culture which put British culture to shame. They are as civilised a people as the Brits, without having the repressed hangups that a lot of Brits have. Madrid is the most erotically charged city I've ever lived in. And Barcelona is the only city in the world to have made the attempt to set itself free from both capitalism and the state and in the process really advance civilisation. Through political correctness we are developing an increasingly bloodless anaemic culture. I'm only glad Spain hasn't gone so far down that road.
Re: Cultural chauvinism
[info]onthedesk wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 08:34 pm (UTC)
I could not have said it better
Just because it's tradition...
[info]clickety6 wrote:
Friday, 10 July 2009 at 02:16 pm (UTC)


...doesn't mean it's not incredibly stupid.
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