Mexico City lawmakers overwhelmingly approve legislation to keep the bullfighting tradition alive, while also keeping the bulls alive.
Mexico City’s local congress on Tuesday passed a measure aiming to make bullfights much less harmful to bulls and matadors, a ...
Showdowns between people and bulls can still go on, but the animals can no longer be hurt or killed. Some bullfighting ...
Activists have hailed the ban as a success for animal rights, but bullfighting fans say it threatens an important centuries-old tradition.
Mexico City's Congress has voted to ban 'violent bullfights.' The legislation bans the killing of bulls inside or outside of ...
Some people might call me a bleeding heart, but having seen the usual result of various bullfights, I believe that this is the right decision, writes our columnist.
The legislation, approved by a 61-1 vote, prohibits the killing of bulls and the use of sharp objects that could injure the ...
Mexico City lawmakers voted overwhelmingly to prohibit the killing or wounding of bulls during any future bullfights.
“It was either this or nothing," said Sofía Morín, an animal rights activist with the organization Culture Without Torture, Mexico Without Bullfighting, leading the initiative to change the laws.
In a groundbreaking move, lawmakers in Mexico City have voted overwhelmingly to ban violent bullfighting, a decision that has sparked both celebration among animal rights advocates and outrage from ...
Lawmakers in Mexico City have voted overwhelmingly to prohibit the killing and injuring of bulls in bullfights, aiming to ...