Pages

Monday 3 November 2014

Farming family accused of bestiality after baby goat is born with ‘human’ face - Warning: Includes unpleasant images

Farming family accused of bestiality after baby goat is born with 'human' face
The family have strongly denied any wrong behaviour with their goats (Picture: CEN)
A family have unwittingly become the subject of public accusations of bestiality after one of their goats gave birth to mutated stillborn baby goat.
The Villalbas from the Centro region of Argentina gained these unwarranted charges after a friend posted photos of the kid online.
Their friend’s intention was highlight the results of excessive use of pesticides not condemn the clan for deviant sexual behaviour.
There is currently heated debate in Argentina as to whether the high levels of pesticides used in farming is causing to health problems in the human population.

Pic shows: The calf born with a human head.nnA shocked Argentinian farming family claim they had a calf born with a human head that they then rushed to bury believing it would bring them bad luck.nnAnd they were right about it being bad luck after one of their neighbours took a snap of it, and posted it online as an example of the excessive use of pesticides in the region.nnBut instead it sparked a furious backlash among superstitious locals when the images went viral and the family were bombarded with accusations that somebody among their number had been having sex with their goat.nnThe farmer's wife Olga Villalba has now been forced into furious denials saying that neither her family or friends had interfered with the goat in any way when the mutant kid was born at their farm in the town of Centro, in north-western Argentinian province of Salta.nnShe said: "It was dead when it was born, we just want to get rid of it as quickly as possible so we buried it in a hole in the ground. It was clearly a genetic mutation caused by the excessive use of pesticides. Another neighbour who was here and was curious took a picture which they unfortunately posted online sparking these ridiculous allegations."nnThe family added that some of the social media messages were extremely aggressive people convinced that it was only through a cross between human and goat that the bizarre offspring shown on the viral images could have been created.nn(ends)n
Olga Villalba strongly refuted the the claims of bestiality saying: ‘It was dead when it was born, we just want to get rid of it as quickly as possible so we buried it in a hole in the ground.
‘It was clearly a genetic mutation caused by the excessive use of pesticides.’
Pic shows: The calf born with a human head.nnA shocked Argentinian farming family claim they had a calf born with a human head that they then rushed to bury believing it would bring them bad luck.nnAnd they were right about it being bad luck after one of their neighbours took a snap of it, and posted it online as an example of the excessive use of pesticides in the region.nnBut instead it sparked a furious backlash among superstitious locals when the images went viral and the family were bombarded with accusations that somebody among their number had been having sex with their goat.nnThe farmer's wife Olga Villalba has now been forced into furious denials saying that neither her family or friends had interfered with the goat in any way when the mutant kid was born at their farm in the town of Centro, in north-western Argentinian province of Salta.nnShe said: "It was dead when it was born, we just want to get rid of it as quickly as possible so we buried it in a hole in the ground. It was clearly a genetic mutation caused by the excessive use of pesticides. Another neighbour who was here and was curious took a picture which they unfortunately posted online sparking these ridiculous allegations."nnThe family added that some of the social media messages were extremely aggressive people convinced that it was only through a cross between human and goat that the bizarre offspring shown on the viral images could have been created.nn(ends)n
The kid was stillborn(Picture: CEN)

No comments:

Post a Comment