Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
A traditional cockfight at the annual long Joon Beel festival in Morigaon district of Assam, India
A cockfight in Assam, India. Police are now hunting for the organisers of the illegal cockfight in the Karimnagar district of Telangana state, India. Photograph: EPA
A cockfight in Assam, India. Police are now hunting for the organisers of the illegal cockfight in the Karimnagar district of Telangana state, India. Photograph: EPA

Rooster fitted with blade for cockfight kills its owner in India

This article is more than 3 years old

Bird with knife attached to leg ready to take on opponent inflicts fatal injuries to man’s groin

A rooster fitted with a knife for an illegal cockfight in southern India has killed its owner, sparking a manhunt for the organisers of the event, police said.

The bird had a knife attached to its leg ready to take on an opponent when it inflicted serious injuries to the man’s groin as it tried to escape, officers said. The man died from loss of blood before he could reach a hospital in the Karimnagar district of Telangana state earlier this week, local police officer B Jeevan told AFP.

The man was among 16 people organising the cockfight in the village of Lothunur when the freak accident took place, Jeevan said. The rooster was briefly held at the local police station before it was sent to a poultry farm.

Blades are tied on the birds. Cockfights are banned but still common in rural areas of Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Odisha states in India. Photograph: EPA

“We are searching for the other 15 people involved in organising the illegal fight,” Jeevan said. They could face charges of manslaughter, illegal betting and hosting a cockfight.

Cockfights are banned but still common in rural areas of Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Odisha states – particularly around the Hindu festival of Sankranti. Specially bred roosters have 7.5cm (3in) knives or blades tethered to their legs and punters bet on who will win the gruesome fight. Thousands of roosters die each year in the battles which, despite the efforts of animal rights groups, attract large crowds.

More on this story

More on this story

  • India's coronavirus death toll passes 500,000

  • India celebrates Diwali under shadow of Covid and air pollution

  • Tax raids target Indian paper that criticised government over Covid

  • India’s excess deaths during Covid ‘could be 10 times official toll’

  • India’s Covid vaccine rollout hit by hesitancy and supply snags

  • ‘My dream was buried’: the children of India orphaned by Covid

  • ‘Black fungus’ disease linked to Covid spreads across India

  • India’s suffering isn’t just the fault of a new Covid variant

  • Stench of death pervades rural India as Ganges swells with Covid victims

Most viewed

Most viewed