|
Jan 2, 2007
Bullfighting is facing an uncertain future in Spain
Bullfighting is facing an uncertain future in Spain
with the announcement that the last bullring
in Barcelona is to close after
failing to draw enough spectators.
The rising cost of mounting a spectacle that a growing
number of Spaniards view as a cruel and unnecessary
part of their culture has
forced the promoters of the Monumental Plaza de Toros
to cut their losses and look for alternatives uses for
the ring.
The company which owns the bullring admitted that the
falling number of spectators meant that it lost more
than £16,000 each time it held a bullfight.
The closure next year of the last bullring in
Catalonia's capital city follows that of two others in
recent years - one of which is being
transformed into a shopping centre designed by Lord
Rogers of Riverside.
Promoters across Spain have seen their profits fall as
it becomes
ever-more expensive to stage the events. The Spanish
Union of Fighting
Bull Breeders estimates that it can cost more than
£70,000 to stage a
corrida with a big- name bullfighter.
From: The London Telegraph

|