World
Are Spain’s controversial bullfighting fiestas in decline?

Preventing bulls cost down the slim winding streets of Pamplona, Spain as hundreds of runners take their lives of their fingers.
San Fermín, the world-famous bull-running competition, lastly returned on Thursday after two years of closure for the pandemic.
The 848-metre path to the town’s bullring, down which the bulls run each morning for eight days through the competition, has change into a mecca for anybody courageous – or silly – sufficient to place themselves on the mercy of the half-tonne animals.
On the finish of every day, the bulls concerned within the morning’s run are utilized in a sequence of bullfights and virtually all the time find yourself on the improper finish of the matador’s espada –- Spanish for sword.
The fiesta additionally offers itself over to every week of consuming, ingesting and dancing.
No stranger to controversy, San Fermín all the time faces intense criticism from animal rights teams who launch imaginative protests earlier than the chupinazo firework marks the beginning of festivities.
But even supporters of the bloody spectacle admit that although Pamplona is a celebration of bullfighting, the truth is that throughout Spain it’s in decline amid a rising animal rights motion and a youthful technology which has different pursuits.
Spain’s tradition ministry compiles detailed stories in regards to the variety of bullfights that are held annually because the spectacle is considered a part of the nation’s cultural life, reasonably like theatre, cinema or literature.
The variety of bullfights fell from 3,651 in 2007 to 1,425 in 2019, the final yr earlier than the pandemic when regular figures had been obtainable. Through the first yr of the pandemic in 2020, solely 129 fights had been held.
Solely 6% of the inhabitants attended bullfights between 2018-2019, the final yr when information was collected on how many individuals attended the fiesta nacional (the nationwide fiesta as it’s recognized).
Some Spaniards regard bullfighting as a part of the nation’s cultural life whereas others imagine it’s merciless or do not need any curiosity in going to see los toros because the spectacle is understood.
Pedro Gutierrez Moya, a well-known bullfighter referred to as El Niño de la Capea who now breeds combating bulls, turned a matador as a result of it was a solution to get meals for his desperately poor household.
When he was rising up within the Nineteen Sixties, the bulls had been used for meat after they had been killed within the ring and bought off.
He insisted combating bulls acquired a lot better therapy than most animals bred by man as they spend 4 years roaming the fields earlier than they meet their finish within the ring.
“It’s the greatest type of conservation of animals. The bulls get a lot better therapy than cows introduced up for meat,” he advised Euronews.
“The most important drawback is the rise of animal rights teams and a authorities which isn’t on our aspect. They don’t need to do something to assist us.”
Final yr, Spain’s left-wing coalition authorities granted one-off €400 grants to younger individuals aged 18-24 to be spent on cultural actions like going to the theatre, cinema or visiting artwork museums. It was supposed to assist an business ravaged by the pandemic.
Nonetheless, the measure brought on controversy as a result of it didn’t embrace bullfighting, a slight which the Fundación del Toro de La Lidia, the organisation which represents the business, objected to.
“This exclusion of bullfighting is against the law as a result of it’s precisely opposite to selling which the federal government is meant to do with cultural actions,” stated the organisation in an announcement.
The Fundación del Toro de la Lidia was alluding to a regulation handed in 2013 by a earlier conservative authorities which stated that bullfighting was a part of the nationwide heritage, successfully stopping any makes an attempt to ban the observe.
Antonio Lorca, bullfighting critic of El País newspaper, Spain’s greatest promoting every day, stated the bloody sport was able to return to the fray after a lull of two years when closed rings severely threatened the survival of bullfighting.
“Regardless of what must be a return, the identical issues stay. There may be division in bullfighting over the right way to deal with large issues like a authorities which isn’t sympathetic and the right way to entice the youthful technology,” he advised Euronews.
“For those who go to bullfights, you see that most individuals are middle-aged or older. We have to discover a solution to entice youthful individuals or it will change into extra marginalised.”
Sitting subsequent to me at a bullfight in Pamplona was 13-year-old José, whose mom didn’t need his actual identify for use. As he watched three rejoneadores – matadors who kill the animal whereas driving a horse – he stated he favored the spectacle.
“I’m not so eager on the bit the place they need to kill the bull although,” he stated.
The packed crowd had a couple of younger faces as mother and father took their kids to look at Guillermo Hermoso de Mendoza, one of many rising stars of bullfighting. However most had been middle-aged or aged.
Aida Gascón, president of AnimaNaturalis, an animal rights group, took half in an illustration in Pamplona through which protesters dressed as 46 dinosaurs raced alongside the observe that the bulls take by way of Pamplona.
The quantity represents the bulls used to run throughout San Fermín, who later confronted matadors within the ring.
“The concept is that bullfighting is prehistoric, and we needed to indicate this to the world in our demonstration. It’s presupposed to be light-hearted,” Gascón advised Euronews.
She stated she hoped the decline of bullfighting would proceed regardless of the hopes of aficionados or supporters that it could stage a comeback after the pandemic.
“We anticipate that this yr we are going to see that there are fewer bullfights than earlier than the pandemic because the decline continues on this merciless exercise,” she stated.
A survey revealed in January by the BBVA Basis, an organisation related to Spain’s second-largest financial institution, discovered virtually 70 per cent of Spaniards polled rejected using animals in bullfights, whereas 23 per cent backed it.
Eight out of ten individuals stated they thought animals must be revered within the survey of two,000 individuals.
Gascón hopes her organisation can elevate a petition to overturn the 2013 regulation which declared bullfighting a part of the nationwide heritage.
She stated AnimaNaturalis would attempt to pressure politicians to overturn the regulation which protects bullfighting.
In actuality, solely the far-left Unidas Podemos celebration, the junior coalition companion within the current authorities, has indicated it favoured banning bullfighting. The Socialists have proven no assist for a ban, maybe realising it could lose them votes.
The opposition conservative Folks’s Celebration is towards any measures towards bullfighting and the far-right Vox celebration, which is the third-largest within the Spanish parliament with 52 seats, has made defending the spectacle a manifesto promise.

World
Social Security lists thousands of living immigrants as dead to prompt them to leave, AP sources say
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration has moved to classify more than 6,000 living immigrants as dead, canceling their Social Security numbers and effectively wiping out their ability to work or receive benefits in an effort to get them to leave the country, according to two people familiar with the situation.
The move will make it much harder for those affected to use banks or other basic services where Social Security numbers are required. It’s part of a broader effort by President Donald Trump to crack down on immigrants who were allowed to enter and remain temporarily in the United States under programs instituted by his predecessor, Joe Biden.
The Trump administration is moving the immigrants’ names and legally obtained Social Security numbers to a database that federal officials normally use to track the deceased, according to the two people familiar with the moves and their ramifications. They spoke on condition of anonymity Thursday night because the plans had not yet been publicly detailed.
The officials said stripping the immigrants of their Social Security numbers will cut them off from many financial services and encourage them to “self-deport” and abandon the U.S. for their birth countries.
It wasn’t immediately clear how the 6,000-plus immigrants were chosen. But the Trump White House has targeted people in the country temporarily under Biden-era programs, including more than 900,000 immigrants who entered the U.S. using that administration’s CBP One app.
On Monday, the Department of Homeland Security revoked the legal status of the immigrants who used that app. They had generally been allowed to remain in the U.S. for two years with work authorization under presidential parole authority during the Biden era, but are now expected to self-deport.
Meanwhile, a federal judge said Thursday that she was stopping the Trump administration from ordering hundreds of thousands of Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans with temporary legal status to leave the country later this month.
A representative from the Social Security Administration did not respond to a request for comment on the news that living immigrants were being classified as dead. The agency maintains the most complete federal database of individuals who have died, and the file contains more than 142 million records, which go back to 1899.
The Privacy Act allows the Social Security Administration to disclose information to law enforcement in limited circumstances, which includes when a violent crime has been committed or other criminal activity.
DHS and the Treasury Deprartment signed a deal this week that would allow the IRS to share immigrants’ tax data with Immigration and Customs Enforcement for the purpose of identifying and deporting people illegally in the U.S. The agreement will allow ICE to submit names and addresses of immigrants inside the U.S. illegally to the IRS for cross-verification against tax records.
The acting IRS commissioner, Melanie Krause, who had served in that capacity since February, stepped down over that deal.
In March, meanwhile, a federal judge temporarily blocked a team charged with cutting federal jobs and shrinking the government led by billionaire Elon Musk from Social Security systems that hold personal data on millions of Americans, calling their work there a “fishing expedition.”
Skye Perryman, president and CEO of Democracy Forward, an advocacy group that has challenged various Trump administration efforts in court, said her organization would likely sue over the Social Security numbers as well, once more details become available.
“This President continues to engage in lawless behavior, violating the law and abusing our systems of checks and balances,” Perryman said.
World
China ramps up military ‘rehearsals’ around Taiwan, outstrips US in air, maritime, space

China has been ramping up its military actions around Taiwan in what one top commander warned on Thursday are not just drills, but “rehearsals.”
“China’s unprecedented aggression and military modernization poses a serious threat to the homeland, our allies and our partners,” Adm. Samuel Paparo, commander of the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, said during a hearing with the Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday. “With military pressure against Taiwan increasing by 300%, China’s increasingly aggressive actions near Taiwan are not just exercises, they are rehearsals.”
Soldiers take up positions during military drills in Jiangxi, China, on Jan. 29, 2023. (CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images)
CHINA LAUNCHES LARGE MILITARY DRILLS AROUND TAIWAN TO ISSUE ‘SEVERE WARNING’
Beijing has long looked to assert its dominance over Taiwan as it aims to “reunify” the island with mainland China in a move the West and Taipei have warned is against Taiwan’s wishes and would disturb the region’s status quo.
Taiwan identifies as a sovereign nation. However, it is officially recognized by China, the United Nations and the U.S. as part of the “One China” policy – though the U.S. has increasingly warned Beijing against disrupting regional stability by forcibly “reunifying” the island with the mainland.
“While the [People’s Liberation Army] PLA attempts to intimidate the people of Taiwan and demonstrate coercive capabilities, these actions are backfiring, drawing increased global attention and accelerating Taiwan’s own defense preparations,” Paparo said.

People’s Liberation Army launches joint military operations around Taiwan island. (People’s Liberation Army, China)
TAIWAN’S PRESIDENT TARGETS CHINA INFLUENCE, KICKS OUT PRO-BEIJING AGITATORS AMID RISING TENSIONS
But it is not only China’s military posture toward Taiwan that concerns top military commanders.
“China’s outproducing the United States in air missile, maritime and space capability and accelerating these,” Paparo said. “I remain confident in our deterrence posture, but the trajectory must change.”
The Indo-Pacific commander warned that China is outstripping the U.S. in the production of fighters at a rate of 1.2 to 1, and warned that the U.S. is falling behind when it comes to shipbuilding, as well as some missile and space-based capabilities.

A screen grab captured from a video shows the Chinese People’s Liberation Army’s Eastern Theater Command launching large-scale joint military exercises around Taiwan with naval vessels and military aircraft on May 24, 2024. (Feng Hao/PLA/China Military/Anadolu via Getty Images)
“They built combatants at the rate of 6 to 1.8 to the United States,” Paparo told the lawmakers, in reference to China’s investment in producing ships, aircraft and weaponry.
“We’ve got to get at the problems of why we don’t have enough [of a] combat logistics force – and that’s shipbuilding. Why we don’t have enough labor,” Paparo said. “And those are looking hard at pay and incentives in order to recruit and retain those people.”
World
NATO Black Sea naval exercise concludes: vigilance is of the essence

One of NATO’s largest annual naval exercises, the Black Sea drill “Sea Shield 25”, is meant to improve cooperation between NATO countries and prepare for different types of threats. The drill comes at a time of heightened tensions in the region, with the Black Sea playing a strategic role on NATO’s eastern flank.
1,600 Romanian troops are participating alongside 11 partner states — Albania, Bulgaria, Canada, France, Greece, Italy, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Spain, the United States and Turkey.
Dozens of ships, patrol planes, helicopters, and approximately 2,600 troops from 12 allied countries are participating in the exercise, which simulates a range of scenarios, including hybrid threats to maritime and aerial attacks. The complex training operations include live-fire exercises and attack simulations designed to ready NATO’s response capabilities.
Roughly 64 kilometres off the Romanian coast, an alarm pierces the calm sea air. An unidentified target has been spotted on radar, starting an immediate alert across the fleet. Air support readies, and an IAR 330 Puma Naval helicopter lifts off on a maritime reconnaissance mission.
Modernisation as well as constant vigilance required
Among the participating units is the Mine Countermeasures Black Sea Task Group, created in 2023, which plays a crucial role in neutralising potential underwater hazards. “There is the danger of drifting mines, which impacts operations,” explains Lieutenant-Commander Cătălin Harabagiu, commander of the Combat and Operations Service aboard the frigate ‘King Ferdinand’: “We must learn to work and operate together and speak the same language.”
The exercise also involves special forces, combat divers, and experts in chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) defence, simulating a wide range of modern warfare scenarios.
Rear-Admiral Cornel Cojocaru, Commander of Romania’s Navy Fleet, emphasised the necessity of modernisation and constant vigilance. “Since the war began, there have been threats and that the Russian Black Sea fleet has carried out attacks on Ukraine both with surface ships, submarines, and aviation,” he said. “We need modern technology just as we need highly trained personnel.”
The exercise offers NATO forces an opportunity to refine their strategies and reinforce collective defence measures in the Black Sea.
The exercise was organised for the first time in 2015, and this year’s edition is coming to an end on 11 April after twelve days of thorough drills.
Video editor • Lucy Davalou
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