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  • Tottenham Hotspur's Harry Kane (right) scores his side's second goal of the game during the Premier League match at the London Stadium.
    32963923.jpg
  • File Photo:  Former England forward Cyrille Regis has died aged 59. <br />
<br />
Cyrille Regis scores the equalising goal for West Bromwich Albion. ... Soccer - League Division One - Chelsea v West Bromwich Albion - Stamford Bridge ... 30-09-1978 ... London ... England ... Photo credit should read: Dave Benett/S&G and Barratts/EMPICS Sport. Unique Reference No. 14103844 ... Archive-590818
    34466656.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_031.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_035.jpg
  • January 30, 2019 - Barcelona, Spain - Ivan Rakitic scores during the match between FC Barcelona and Sevilla FC, corresponding to the secong leg of the 1/4 final of the spanish cup, played at the Camp Nou Stadium, on 30th January 2019, in Barcelona, Spain. Photo: Joan Valls/Urbanandsport /NurPhoto. (Credit Image: © Joan Valls/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20190130_zaa_n230_595.jpg
  • January 30, 2019 - Barcelona, Spain - Ivan Rakitic scores during the match between FC Barcelona and Sevilla FC, corresponding to the secong leg of the 1/4 final of the spanish cup, played at the Camp Nou Stadium, on 30th January 2019, in Barcelona, Spain. Photo: Joan Valls/Urbanandsport /NurPhoto. (Credit Image: © Joan Valls/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20190130_zaa_n230_581.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_002.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_008.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_004.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_014.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_015.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_013.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_017.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_018.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_021.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_026.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_027.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_029.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_042.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_043.jpg
  • September 7, 2018 - Bologna, Italy - Italy v Poland - UEFA Nations League..Piotr Zielinski of Poland scores the goal of 0-1 at Renato Dall'Ara Stadium in Bologna, Italy on September 7, 2018. (Credit Image: © Matteo Ciambelli/NurPhoto/ZUMA Press)
    20180907_zaa_n230_650.jpg
  • Orlando Pirates supporters celebrate after their team scores during their PSL clash with Bloemfontein celtic at Orlando stadium, Soweto.<br />
Picture: Itumeleng English/ African News Agency /ANA<br />
115<br />
04.04.2018
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_028.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_026.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_027.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_029.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_034.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_033.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_032.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_037.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_030.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A 2003 raid of Michael Jackson‘s infamous Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, Calif., turned up a sinister secret closet filled with the singer’s most creepy and questionable belongings. This collection of evidence includes reports written after sheriff's deputies with search warrants raided Jackson's Neverland Ranch in Los Olives, CA, in November 2003. The search was conducted as part of the child sex investigation against Jackson. The search was conducted as part of the continuing child sex abuse investigation against the Gloved One. Scores of investigators from the Santa Barbara County District Attorney's Office and the Sheriff's Department descended on Jackson's palatial property to search for evidence of wrongdoing. Items "collected by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department paint a dark and frightening picture of Jackson," an investigator on the case told Radar. 19 Nov 2003 Pictured: Evidence. Photo credit: AMI/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA384260_036.jpg
  • February 24, 2019 - Bogota, Colombia - Fabian Sambueza of Junior scores the goal during a match between Independiente Santa Fe and Junior as part of Torneo Apertura Liga Aguila 2019 at Estadio El Campin on February 24, 2019 in Bogota, Colombia. (Credit Image: © Daniel Garzon Herazo/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20190224_zaa_n230_1102.jpg
  • February 24, 2019 - Bogota, Colombia - Fabian Sambueza of Junior scores the goal  during a match between Independiente Santa Fe and Junior as part of Torneo Apertura Liga Aguila 2019 at Estadio El Campin on February 24, 2019 in Bogota, Colombia. (Credit Image: © Daniel Garzon Herazo/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20190224_zaa_n230_1103.jpg
  • .Matt Ritchie of Newcastle United scores from the penalty spot during the Premier League match between Newcastle United and Manchester City at St. James's Park in Newcastle, UK on Tuesday, January 29, 2019.  (Photo by MI News/NurPhoto/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_25420118.jpg
  • 16092018(Durban) Goal scores Phakamani Mahlambi at a match were AmaZulu FC targeted an upset win over Mamelodi Sundowns when the teams meet at King Zwelithini Stadium on 16 September 2018<br />
Picture: Motshwrai Mofokeng/African News Agency (ANA)
    Amazulu vs Sundowns .jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_005.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_003.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_006.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_007.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_010.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_009.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_011.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_012.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_022.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_016.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_019.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_020.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_025.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_023.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_030.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_024.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_028.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_031.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_032.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_033.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_034.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_039.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_040.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_041.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_035.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_036.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_001.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_038.jpg
  • Horrific footage shows the seas turn red with blood after more than 200 dolphins were slaughtered by locals in the Faroe Islands as part of an ancient Norse tradition. Graphic video shows the highly-intelligent animals writhing and squirming in blood as fisherman plunge metal hooks into their blow holes before severing their spines. The hunt, known locally as Grindadrap, is a tradition dating back to the 13th Century which sees local fishermen slaughter Atlantic white-side dolphins — as seen here — and long-finned pilot whales after driving the mammals towards shallow waters by closing in on them using a large semicircle of boats. Conservation group Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the stomach-churning video and images, says that according to Faroese reports 210 Atlantic white-side dolphins were killed in the most recent hunt — the 11th of the year — which took place on the coast of Hvalvik on September 11. Gory images depict the ocean as a bloodbath with scores of dolphins lying dead on the shoreline with gaping wounds across their heads. Weeks previously 180 whales were killed on the island as part of the same ritual. According to Sea Shepherd UK, which captured the footage as part of its 'Operation Bloody Fjords’ campaign, the Faroese have killed more than 62,000 pilot whales and dolphins over the past 50 years. It also claims that in 2017 alone, a total 1,691 dolphins and whales were killed in 24 grindadráp hunts in the Faroe Islands and the running total for 2018 is 561 pilot whales and 255 Atlantic white-sided dolphins. Animal activist group PETA says the sea animals endure great suffering and pain: ‘Metal hooks are driven into the stranded mammals' blowholes before their spines are cut. ‘The animals slowly bleed to death. Whole families are slaughtered, and some whales swim around in their family members' blood for hours. ‘Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and feel pain and fear every bit as much as we do.’ But authorities
    MEGA275861_037.jpg
  • Durban. 030318. Jake Gordoni of the Waratahs  scores during the Super Rugby match between Cell C Sharks and Waratahs at Kings Park on March 03, 2018 in Durban, South Africa. Picture Leon Lestrade/African News Agency/ANA
    Sharks vs Waratahs 6413.jpg
  • Durban. 030318. Jake Gordoni of the Waratahs  scores during the Super Rugby match between Cell C Sharks and Waratahs at Kings Park on March 03, 2018 in Durban, South Africa. Picture Leon Lestrade/African News Agency/ANA
    Sharks vs Waratahs C6398.jpg
  • Durban. 030318. Jake Gordoni of the Waratahs  scores during the Super Rugby match between Cell C Sharks and Waratahs at Kings Park on March 03, 2018 in Durban, South Africa. Picture Leon Lestrade/African News Agency/ANA
    Sharks vs Waraths 6415.jpg
  • November 2, 2017 - Bucharest, Romania - Hapoel's Ben Sahar scores during the UEFA Europa League group G football match Steaua Bucharest FCSB v Hapoel Beer-Sheva FC in Bucharest, Romania on November 2, 2017. (Credit Image: © Alex Nicodim/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20171102_zaa_n230_275.jpg
  • November 2, 2017 - Bucharest, Romania - Hapoel's Ben Sahar scores during the UEFA Europa League group G football match Steaua Bucharest FCSB v Hapoel Beer-Sheva FC in Bucharest, Romania on November 2, 2017. (Credit Image: © Alex Nicodim/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20171102_zaa_n230_273.jpg
  • England's Harry Kane scores his sides first goal  during FIFA World Cup Qualifying - European Region - Group F match between England and Slovenia at Wembley stadium in London, UK on October 5, 2017. (Photo by Kieran Galvin/NurPhoto/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_21288948.jpg
  • England's Harry Kane scores his sides first goal during FIFA World Cup Qualifying - European Region - Group F match between England and Slovenia at Wembley stadium in London, UK on October 5, 2017. (Photo by Kieran Galvin/NurPhoto/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_21288944.jpg
  • February 21, 2019 - Saint Petersburg, Russia - Zenit St.Petersburg's Iranian forward Sardar Azmoun celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal during the UEFA Europa League round of 32 second leg football match between FC Zenit and Fenerbahce SK in Saint Petersburg on February 21, 2019. (Credit Image: © Igor Russak/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20190221_zaa_n230_511.jpg
  • February 21, 2019 - Saint Petersburg, Russia - Zenit St.Petersburg's Iranian forward Sardar Azmoun celebrates with Sebastián Driussi (#11) after scoring a goal during the UEFA Europa League round of 32 second leg football match between FC Zenit and Fenerbahce SK in Saint Petersburg on February 21, 2019. (Credit Image: © Igor Russak/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20190221_zaa_n230_514.jpg
  • February 21, 2019 - Saint Petersburg, Russia - Zenit St.Petersburg's Iranian forward Sardar Azmoun celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal during the UEFA Europa League round of 32 second leg football match between FC Zenit and Fenerbahce SK in Saint Petersburg on February 21, 2019. (Credit Image: © Igor Russak/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20190221_zaa_n230_510.jpg
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