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After Jallikattu stir success, chorus for lifting ban on

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Press Trust of India Bengaluru
With the decks getting cleared for the bull taming festival of Jallikattu in neighbouringTamil Nadu, there is a growing chorus for organising Kambala, a traditional annual buffalo race in marshy fields, held in the coastal districts of Karnataka.

Spurred by the Jallikattu agitation in Tamil Nadu,Kambala Committees have decided to meet in Mangaluru tomorrowto strategise their agitation.

"By coming Wednesday or Thursday we are also planningan agitation in this region. By organising a large-scale agitation in Mangaluru we want to attract the attention of politicians and the whole nation."

"Kambala lovers from Udupi and Mangaluru regions and 150-200 pairs of buffaloes willparticipate in it," Kamabala Committee President Ashok Raisaid.
 

He said "when Jallikattu has got permission, Kambala should also get it, because no violence is involved in it. It is part of our cultural heritage."

Karnataka High Court's division bench, headed by Chief Justice S K Mukherjee in an interim order in November 2016 had stayed holding of Kambala on a petition byPETA challenging it in view of orders passed by the SupremeCourt on Jallikattu.

Kambala Committees have filed an interim application, seeking vacation of the stay.

The matter came up yesterday before the division bench of the High Court, which adjourned the case to January 30.

"Kambala has been disrupted because of PETA's ill intentions. We have faith that we will get legal victoryalso. There is lot of difference between Kambala and Jallikattu," P R Shetty, member of Kambala Committeesaid.

Support for Kambala, a folk sport, has gained momentum in the social media also.

The ban has sparked a debate on whether the event amounts to cruelty to animals or it was just a simple rural sport, which involves racing of buffaloes in paddy fields filled with slush and mud that draws a large number of people.

Kambla in its traditional form is non-competitive with buffalo pairs made to race one after another in paddy fields, which is considered a thanksgiving to the Gods for protecting the animals from diseases.

Over the years, it has however become an organised sport with animal rights activists claiming that the buffaloes run in the race due to fear of being beaten, which the organisers dismiss, saying no violence is involved and that several modifications had been made to ensure that it is an animal friendly event.

Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content

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First Published: Jan 21 2017 | 8:42 PM IST

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