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Another #Metoo win? Japan lifts men-only rule from bullfighting

Until now, women have been barred from bull rings, which are ritually purified before matches with salt and sake

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File photo of bulls weighing about 1,000kg crashing against each other at a bullfight in Okinawa City. Photo: EPA
Agence France-Presse

Japanese bullfighting organisers said on Saturday they had lifted a long-standing ban on women entering the sport’s “sacred” ring, in a bid to modernise the traditional activity for the so-called #Metoo generation.

Japanese sumo has recently come under fire for its strict men-only rules. In “togyu” bullfighting, women were similarly barred from the ring, which is ritually purified before matches with salt and sake.

But on Friday, organisers lifted the prohibition and allowed female bull owner Yuki Araki to lead her animal into the ring in Yamakoshi, north of Tokyo, after a fight on the opening day of this season.

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Giant bulls fight during a bullfighting event in Uruma, Okinawa prefecture. Photo: AFP
Giant bulls fight during a bullfighting event in Uruma, Okinawa prefecture. Photo: AFP

“Equality for men and women is a trend of the times,” said Katsushi Seki, an official with the Yamakoshi bullfight organisation. “By opening the ring to women, we hope this traditional bullfighting will continue far into the future.”

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Unlike Spanish style bullfighting which ends with a matador slaying the animal, “togyu” is a bloodless match between two bulls locking horns, with great pains taken to ensure the animals do not gore each other.

“I’m glad that local people openly welcomed us,” bull owner Yuki Araki, 44, told Japanese public broadcaster NHK.

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