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Added on the 13/07/2019 12:30:28 - Copyright : Euronews EN
Crowds gather for the first run with the bulls during the iconic San Fermin festival in Pamplona, Spain. IMAGES
The Miura bulls of Seville break the speed record at 2 minutes and five seconds in the closing bull run in Pamplona, with no serious injuries. Angela Moore reports.
One of Spain's best-loved traditions, the San Fermin festival's bull-running kicks off in Pamplona. IMAGES
The crowd went wild as a pyrotechnic bull roared through the Mexican town of Tultepec on Wednesday, spraying a cascade of sparks into dancing revelers taking part in the San Juan de Dios festival. San Juan de Dios is the patron saint of fireworks makers, and Mexicans celebrate his memory with a huge fireworks festival running from March 8 to March 11. Festival goers naturally set off a huge display of all sorts of fireworks, large and small, but one of the most popular sorts are called toritos, which are huge bull-shaped contraptions on wheels, designed to be pulled through the streets while fireworks and sparks jet off and into the crowd. A fireworks explosion in nearby Mexico City had killed 61 people in 1988, and so a ban was placed on such explosives in the city and its surrounding urban areas - including Tultepec. Tultepec was one of Mexico's major fireworks-making locations and the area suffered economically from the prohibition. However, the Mexican National Pyrotechnic Festival was started in 1989 in an effort to draw back tourism to the municipality of Tultepec. So far, it looks like it could be working.
Spain is famous for its running with the bulls. But did you know that kids can also participate? We join in the yearly San Fermín festival in Pamplona to find out how.