The Borneo Post

Shark mauls woman in rare Sydney Harbour attack

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A shark mauled a woman swimmer in the first attack in Sydney Harbour in 15 years, officials said Tuesday, sending her to hospital with a “serious” leg injury.

The predator struck Monday evening as the woman swam off a wharf at Elizabeth Bay, less than two kilometres from Sydney Opera House, police said.

The woman suffered a “serious injury to her right leg”, New South Wales police said in a statement.

It was the first shark attack in Sydney Harbour since February 2009, when an Australian navy diver fought off a bull shark that bit him in the arm and leg in Woolloomoo­loo Bay.

Neighbours rushed to help the Elizabeth Bay victim, identified by the Sydney Morning Herald as 29-year-old Lauren O’Neill, a keen kayaker.

“I got home from work and sat down on the couch. I heard a soft yell for help just outside the window,” nearby resident Michael Porter told reporters.

Outside, he saw the woman trying to climb a ladder out of the harbour’s waters.

“Behind her was her leg, which was limp and all completely open and full of dark red blood behind her,” Porter said.

“She had obviously been mauled extremely badly by whatever shark it was that got her,” he said.

“We have always worried and known about sharks in the harbour,” he added.

“It’s only now that it feels very real.”

A veterinari­an living nearby gave first aid.

The woman was in a stable condition in intensive care at St Vincent’s hospital, a hospital spokespers­on said.

She was expected to undergo surgery during the day.

Analysis of the shark bite and of images provided by the authoritie­s confirmed “a bull shark was likely responsibl­e”, said shark scientist Amy Smoothey.

Sharks are “more actively feeding” in low light at dawn and dusk, she told national broadcaste­r ABC, making it “potentiall­y a high-risk time to be swimming”.

Scientists have tagged 87 large bull sharks in Sydney Harbour since 2009, said Smoothey, who works for the New South Wales department of primary industries.

Tagging indicated that bull shark numbers in the harbour were at their highest in the Australian summer months of January and February, she said.

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