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SPANISH LAW

Spain bans ‘dwarf bullfights’

Spanish lawmakers on Thursday banned bullfighting events featuring people with dwarfism wearing costumes, a move welcomed by disability rights groups but opposed by the actual performers.

SPAIN-DWARFS-BULLFIGHTING
Many "dwarf toreros" say they feel respected and appreciated, and that without the shows their livelihood is at stake. (Photo by Eitan ABRAMOVICH / AFP)

Groups of people with dwarfism dressed as firefighters have long entertained audiences by chasing young bulls without killing them, in shows considered to be comic.

While the numbers of self-styled “dwarf toreros” are dwindling, so-called “dwarf bullfights” can still been seen, especially during festivals honouring a town’s patron saint.

The law approved in parliament on Thursday prohibits “shows or recreational activities in which people with disabilities, or this circumstance, are used to provoke mockery or ridicule from the public”.

It aims to bring Spain in line with European Union directives on discrimination against disabled people.

The country’s Royal Board on Disabilities, which advises the social rights ministry, said Spain had “advanced human rights by banning public shows that humiliated disabled people”.

READ ALSO: Will bullfighting ever be banned in Spain?

The body’s director general, Jesus Martin, said the events “passed the idea to so many girls and boys who go with adults to see these shameful performances that it is ok to laugh at difference”.

But many “dwarf toreros” say they feel respected and appreciated, and that without the shows their livelihood is at stake.

“We are bullfighters, we are artists, enough prohibitions, we don’t want handouts,” one group of “dwarf toreros” called “Amusement in the Arena” wrote on its Facebook page.

A handful of “dwarf bullfight” performers protested outside parliament ahead of the vote on the law to express their opposition to the ban.

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CULTURE

Cate Blanchett to be honoured at Spain’s San Sebastián film festival

Australian actress Cate Blanchett will receive a lifetime achievement award at Spain's San Sebastián film festival in September, organisers said Thursday.

Cate Blanchett to be honoured at Spain's San Sebastián film festival

The 54-year-old will also feature on the main poster of the 72nd San Sebastián film festival, the highest-profile movie event in the Spanish-speaking world, which takes place from September 20th to 28th.

Blanchett has won two Academy Awards: best actress for her performance in Woody Allen’s 2004 drama “Blue Jasmine” and best supporting actress for her striking appearance as Katherine Hepburn in Martin Scorsese’s “The Aviator”.

She has worked under numerous renowned directors, including Terrence Malick, Steven Soderbergh, Steven Spielberg, David Fincher, Ridley Scott, Wes Anderson, Alfonso Cuaron, Alejandro G. Iñarritu and Guillermo del Toro.

The festival organisers said she was “one of contemporary cinema’s leading actors” with a “career combining cinema d’auteur with crowd pleasers”.

Past recipients of the so-called Donostia award — the festival’s highest honourary award — include actors Meryl Streep, Richard Gere and Robert De Niro.

It will be the first time Blanchett, a university dropout who grew up in suburban Melbourne, visits San Sebastián.

She will be the second Australian to receive the prize, following in the footsteps of Hugh Jackman.

As well as scooping awards for her more arthouse work, she has also dabbled in blockbusters, playing the elf leader Galadriel in the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy and a Marvel villain in “Thor: Ragnarok”.

Spanish star Javier Bardem will also receive the Donostia award he won last year but was unable to attend because of the Hollywood actors’ strike, organisers said.

The prize is named after the Basque word for the coastal town of San Sebastián.

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