-
British retiree in France refunded after paying £2,100 to drive in Ulez
Transport for London rectified Low Emission Zone error after The Connexion reported his case
-
Popular Mont d’Or cheese 'season' begins in France and runs until May 2025
The cheese is a staple of autumn and winter tables
-
Paris ring road: region to oppose October speed cut to 50 km/h
It comes after the Ile-de-France president said the Paris mayor was ‘denying democracy’
Anti-bullfight march sparks clashes in key French town
Gendarmes have clashed with anti-bullfighting activists at a bull festival in the notorious town of Rodilhan in the Gard (Occitanie), after hundreds of protesters marched against the practice.
Around 200 protesters gathered this Sunday (October 21) in Rodilhan, a small commune in the department that has become a symbol for the conflict between bullfighting advocates and those who want to see it banned.
The protest took place during a bull festival, in an event organised by anti-bullfighting committee the Comité Radicalement Anticorrida (CRAC).
Using whistles, sirens, drums and flags, protesters said they were demanding “an end to torture rituals”. Montpellier native and animal welfare activist Rémi Gaillard was also present.
Yet, the demonstration was barred from entering the town centre by iron barriers and gendarmerie lines. Law enforcement services later used tear gas to disperse protesters, reports have said.
At least one protester was reported as injured.
🔴🔴 Environ 200 anti-corrida sont contenus au niveau d'un pont à quelques centaines de mètres des arènes pour le festival taurin.
— France Bleu Gard Lozère (@bleugardlozere) October 21, 2018
#corrida #gard pic.twitter.com/qTC2YPFE0v
🔴🔴 Une militante anti-corrida blessée au cou exfiltrée par les gendarmes mobiles lors d'une manifestation anti-corrida pendant le festival taurin de Rodilhan. pic.twitter.com/3uZYqExR8X
— France Bleu Gard Lozère (@bleugardlozere) October 21, 2018
Rodilhan has become an unlikely symbol of anti-bullfighting, as former president of CRAC, the late Jean-Pierre Garrigues, used to teach there. Unafraid to use militancy, he aimed to transform the town into an anti-bullfighting base.
The biggest clash in the town’s anti-bullfighting history happened on October 8 2011, when activists let off smoke bombs in the centre-ville and began chanting slogans.
Gendarmerie were allegedly violent towards protesters when they were on the ground, and used force to disperse the crowds.
In 2016, 17 protesters were handed prison sentences of up to six months for their roles in the incident.
Stay informed:
Sign up to our free weekly e-newsletter
Subscribe to access all our online articles and receive our printed monthly newspaper The Connexion at your home. News analysis, features and practical help for English-speakers in France