India video captures men using SUV-style Bolero to attack bull

by Piyush Mathur

A deeply disturbing video has emerged on Facebook showing a bull being brutally hit three times by an SUV-style Bolero occupied by several men in India.

The footage shows a somewhat narrow, undulating dirt street that prevented the bull from running into an area where he won’t be chased. The video thumbnail claims this incident occurred in Sikar, in the state of Rajasthan.

The vehicle first hits the bull on his back-and-side area, prompting the creature to run away in fear from the vehicle—despite the injury he had received causing him to limp—except that he could go further into the same direction only within the confines of the street.

However, the vehicle chases after him—taking advantage of the lack of space for him to step out of its range.

The vehicle hits the bull again with great force on his back, despite the vocal protests of the onlookers, including women.

The bull falls down, grievously injured, into a relatively hollow space of the road. He tries to get up but is too injured to even properly lift his head.

This is the screenshot of a part of a Facebook reel showing a bull intentionally hit by men in India using a Bolero.

This is the screenshot of a part of a Facebook reel showing a fallen bull, who had been intentionally hit by men in India using a Bolero. (Credit: Anita)

But Bolero’s driver rams into the fallen bull—a 3rd hit—who was looking toward the vehicle while trying unsuccessfully to lift his head.

This screenshot captures the moment before the fallen bull—who had been intentionally hit twice already by men in India driving a Bolero—was run over in the third attack. (Credit: Anita)

The vehicle stops on top of the fallen bull for a few seconds—as a male teenager in a red full shirt opens the door and steps out.

That teenager springs over to the side of the road, stands with the protesting villagers, and asks the driver to back up the vehicle (from the fallen bull’s body) and move on. The vehicle apparently takes his advice—backs up and simply drives off.

The video was uploaded over 19 hours ago (i.e., on October 2, 2025) on the Facebook page of one ‘Anita’, who has 164 k followers. The reel, already viewed over 11 k times, can be accessed on this link: https://www.facebook.com/reel/570446022825865

The reel can also be accessed as a regular video on this link: https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=570446022825865

The video caption in Hindi wonders to the viewers whether the perpetrators of this crime would be handed the same treatment or not.

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