Eight injured in Pamplona's bull-running festival

One man was gored by a bull horn under his right armpit
Eight injured in Pamplona's bull-running festival

Revelers run with bulls from Fuente Ymbro ranch during the first day of the running of the bulls at the San FermĂ­n fiestas in Pamplona, Spain, on Monday. Photo: AP/Miguel Oses

A man was gored and seven others lightly injured during the second day of Pamplona's San Fermin festival in which thousands of people line the mediaeval city's narrow streets for the running of the bulls.

The man who was gored, identified only as being older than 25, was injured by a bull horn under his right armpit, a spokesperson for the city emergency services said.

"At this time, he is under observation but is in stable condition," she told reporters.

The seven others suffered bruises and contusions, some in the shoulder or head.

In the festival's "encierros", or bull runs, bulls are set loose in the streets and then race to reach the bullfight arena. Hundreds of aficionados, many wearing traditional white shirts with red scarves, run with them.

On Tuesday morning, one of the bulls stopped in the middle of his run, and charged the runners for several tense minutes.

The festival, which gained international fame from Ernest Hemingway's 1926 novel The Sun Also Rises, lasts for one week in early July.

Participants are occasionally gored at the hundreds of such bull-running fiestas in Spain every year. Other injuries are common. At least 16 runners have lost their lives at the Pamplona festival down the years, the last in 2009.

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