Cockfighting in Cuba: clandestine venues,
state arenas
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[April 25, 2017]
By Sarah Marsh and Alexandre Meneghini
CIEGO DE AVILA (Reuters) - Cuban farmer
Pascual Ferrel says his favorite fighting cock's prowess was "off the
charts," so after it died of illness he had the black and red rooster
preserved and displays it on his mantelpiece beside a television.
"He fought six times and was invincible," the 64-year old recalled
fondly, talking over the crowing of 60 birds in his farmyard in the
central Cuban region of Ciego de Avila.
Though it is banned in many parts of the world, cockfighting is favored
throughout the Caribbean and in Cuba its popularity is growing.
Last year, Ciego de Avila opened its first official cockfighting arena
with 1,000 seats, the largest in Cuba, to the dismay of animal rights
activists who see it as a step backward.
Cockfighting is a blood sport because of the harm cocks do to each other
in cockpits, exacerbated by metal spurs that can be attached to birds'
own spurs.
After the 1959 revolution, Cuba cracked down on cockfighting as part of
a ban on gambling, recalls Ferrel.
Over the years that stance has softened. Official arenas have opened and
hidden arenas are tolerated as long as there are no brawls.
"'People say: if the government is allowed to hold cockfights, why can't
we?" says Nora Garcia Perez, head of Cuban animal welfare association
Aniplant.
Enthusiasts argue that cockfighting is a centuries-old tradition.
Critics say it is cruel, and they blame its popularity on lack of
entertainment options, poor education on animal welfare, and its
money-making potential.
In Ciego de Avila, there is a different clandestine arena for every day
of the week, some hidden among marabu brush or in sugarcane fields, down
dirt tracks with no signs.
People carrying cockerels in slings or under their arms travel to these
venues by horse-drawn carriage, bicycle or in candy-colored vintage
American cars.
Arenas made of wood and palm fronds operate like fairgrounds. Ranchera
music blasts from loudspeakers, roasted pork and rum are sold and tables
are set up with dice and card games.
"You'll see how fun this is," says Yaidelin Rodriguez, 32, a regular
with her husband, writing in a notebook bets she has placed on her cock.
Gambling is outlawed in Cuba but wads of cash exchange hands at most
arenas. Enthusiasts wear baseball caps that read "Cocks win me money,
women take it away."
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Cockfighting enthusiasts watch a fight at a cockfighting arena in
Moron, central region of Ciego de Avila province, Cuba, February 16,
2017. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini
In the Ciego de Avila official arena, foreigners pay up to $60 for a
front row seat. At concealed arenas, mainly a local affair, seats
are $2 to $8, a princely sum in a country where the average monthly
state salary is $25.
"We can earn about $600 a day from entrance fees and the sale of
seats," says Reinol, who declined to give his full name.
He splits that sum with his business partner and still earns more
from it than from his regular job as a butcher.
Cuba also exports cockerels, breeders say, adding that cocks with
proven fighting prowess could sell for up to $1000.
At a secluded arena near Ciego de Avila one recent afternoon,
cigar-smoking, rum-swigging owners guarded their birds to make sure
no one hurt or poisoned them before the fight.
"Come on," "Go for it," onlookers screeched once it began, the cocks
flying at one another in rage.
"You have to train the cocks like they are boxers, so they are
prepared," says Basilio Gonzalesm adding they must also be groomed,
scarlet legs sheared and feathers clipped.
Some, like cockfighting enthusiast Jorge Guerra, dream of making
more money in countries where betting is legal.
"I'd like to go somewhere with big competitions and bets like Puerto
Rico," the farmer said. "I'd like to show someone how much money I
could make for them breeding cocks."
Click here to see a related photo essay: http://reut.rs/2pCDa3B
(Editing by Christian Plumb and; Toni Reinhold)
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