More than
250,000 animals are being lined up for slaughter as Nepal embarks on a
two-day religious festival where buffalo, birds and goats are sacrificed
to appease a Hindu goddess.
Millions
of Hindus flock to the ceremony, which is held every five years at the
temple of Gadhimai, the goddess of power, in Bariyarpur, Nepal, near the
Indian border.
The
last time the festival was held, in 2009, more than 250,000 animals
were killed, according to animal rights organisation PETA, who is
campaigning to put a stop to the practice.
The
festival is 'kicked off' with the ritual slaughter of five thousand
buffalo in a field near the temple, after which two days of ritual
animal slaughter takes place.
Animal
rights activists such as PETA are campaigning to halt the mass
animal-slaughter, but despite their efforts, the organisers of the
festival has promised that this year will be the biggest yet.
About
2.5 million devotees have turned out for the festival, according to
local government official Yogendra Prasad Dulal, who said it was
'impossible to estimate' the total number of animals sacrificed so far.
'It has
been a grand day,' Mangal Chaudhary, head priest at a the Gadhimai
temple said. 'The buffalo sacrifice has ended, but we will continue the
rituals with goats and other animals for one more day,'
On
the first day, worshippers slaughtered more than 6,000 buffaloes, which
were coralled into holding pens in the fields, along with at least
100,000 goats and other animals, Chaudhary said.
The festivities will continue on Saturday when at least another 100,000 animals will die in the name of goddess Gadhimai.
More than 80 per cent of Nepal's 27 million people are
Hindus, but unlike most of their counterparts in neighbouring
India, they frequently sacrifice animals to appease deities
during festivals.
Authorities deployed hundreds of police personnel to make
sure there were no clashes between activists and the devotees.
'It is a ritual connected with people's faith,' said
Yogendra Dulal, an assistant administrator of the Bara district,
where the temple is located. 'We can't hurt their sentiments and
ban the practice.'
Worshippers
believe the animal sacrifice, meant to appease Gadhimai, the Hindu
goddess of power, brings them luck and prosperity.
The ritual began at dawn with a ceremonial 'pancha bali' or
the sacrifice of five animals, comprising a rat, a goat, a
rooster, a pig and a pigeon.
Although cows are considered sacred by Hindu's, the thousands of animals seen slaughtered in these pictures are buffalo.
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