Brian Davies' Network for Animals
July 2018
Over a weekend fiesta of horse fighting, over seventy stallions will enter hideous fights, and each mare is submitted to repeated mounting by the ‘victor’ of each bout. Over the last six years Network for Animals has nearly halved the number of such fights taking place in Mindanao, from 33 to 15. This is a worthy achievement, but we will not stop there. Our aim, as with any animal cruelty is to wipe it out completely. We fight with compassion, grassroots involvement, education, petitions and you, our dedicated supporters.
SIGN and SHARE this online petition.
Two stallions, forced to fight over a mare, tied against her will in the
center of the arena. There are no victors in this fight.
Network For Animals need your help to end the brutal bloodsport of
Organized Horse Fighting in the southern Philippines.
The sound of cheering reverberates through the arena, from a crowd made up
of gamblers, gangsters, families, and even small children. In every fight,
two innocent stallions are made to fight brutally over a poor mare, paraded
in front of them as their ‘prize’.
Over a weekend fiesta of horse fighting, over seventy stallions will enter
hideous fights, and each mare is submitted to repeated mounting by the
‘victor’ of each bout. No horse really wins in Organized Horse Fighting. It
is a blood sport which needs to end.
Network for Animals are battling a cruelty that is illegal, yet endemic in
the southern Philippines, and taking a stand means moving against organised
crime in an area where gun carrying is the norm, not the exception.
We have been victorious in Bukidnon, North Cotabato and beyond, and
Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte proudly supported our campaign in Davos
City prior to his May 2016 election victory. Now let us politely ask him to
expand his support across Mindanao and end Organized Horse Fighting once and
for all.
etwork for Animals campaigns against the cruel and illegal practice of
organized horse fighting, a shocking blood sport prevalent in Mindanao, a
part of the Southern Philippines where it is billed as a cultural tradition.
In an organized horse fight, a female horse is tied up, and two male horses
are incited to fight each other. The female horse’s scent helps to arouse
the fighting instinct of the stallions and the ‘winning’ horse mounts the
female after fighting. This female horse is effectively raped – all in the
name of entertainment.
Organized horse fighting is brutal. During a fight, male horses are forced
to bite, kick and strike each other with their hooves, inflicting serious
injuries until one of them submits, flees or dies. Gouges, gashes and broken
limbs sustained during fights are serious and can be fatal. The suffering
experienced by these horses is agonizing.
While most fights last about 15 minutes, they have been known to last for
three hours. Today, bouts are limited to one hour, to maximize the number of
fights per day. An average of four horses die instantly during organized
horse fights each year, many more suffer internal bleeding, contusions and
fractures. An estimated 15 horses each year take up to a week to die painful
deaths because of such injuries.
Organized horse fighting take place in city stadiums or large fenced areas
over three days, before raucous crowds who attend in anticipation of intense
fighting, gore and death. Horse fights are referred to as derbies, and
arranged by local crime syndicates. While horse fighting is promoted under
the guise of tradition, the main reason is gambling, with bets reaching
1,000,000 pesos (£16,000). And, although Organized Horse Fighting is
illegal, organizers receive sponsorship money from local businesses and
politicians, evidence of how accepted the cruelty and pain of organized
horse fighting is within Mindanao.
With high stakes in the balance, most horse fights involve purpose bred and
trained animals who are large and sturdy and trained to be aggressive.
Local officials can be fiercely protective of the activity and generally
defy the national government’s authority on the issue, to the extent that
local police are often hired by the promoters for crowd control. The power
of organized criminal networks running these fights is very clear.
However, over the last six years Network for Animals has nearly halved the
number of such fights taking place in Mindanao, from 33 to 15. This is a
worthy achievement, but we will not stop there. Our aim, as with any animal
cruelty is to wipe it out completely. We fight with compassion, grassroots
involvement, education, petitions and you, our dedicated supporters.
How we fight against cruelty
Funding veterinary care: Veterinary services for horses in the Philippines
are basic and often too expensive for impoverished local farmers. As an
incentive to stop horse fighting, providing horses are not used in fights,
Network for Animals provides free veterinary clinics in communities where
horse fighting is prevalent.
Education: Educating the public about the animal welfare concerns inherent
in horse fighting is a crucial part of our work. Network regularly persuades
television stations and newspapers to cover the horse fighting issue,
reaching hundreds of thousands of people with our message of compassion.
Additionally, we print and distribute educational leaflets and posters in
horse fighting areas, give presentations to veterinarians, schools and civic
groups, and when funding allows, run advertisements in newspapers.
Petitions: Tourism is a vital source of revenue for the southern
Philippines, an area that has an abundance of world class diving locations
and beaches. Network works to petition prominent officials, with our team
following up all petitions. Positive messages from you, our supporters, to
such officials through petitions are extremely helpful.
Thank you for everything you do for animals!
Return to Action Alerts
Find
area codes
Find zip
codes
Find your United States Congressional Representative
Find
your United States Senators
Find your state legislators
Find Embassies Worldwide