Weekend Herald

All I heard was ‘help’

Heroics come as surf lifesavers call for better funding

- Alice Peacock

Ateen girl rescued her friend from drowning — just three days after attending her first surf lifesaving lesson. Ilynah Itamua, an Onehunga High School student, is being hailed a hero after her quick-thinking actions saved the life of a friend who suffered a suspected panic attack while swimming at a popular Auckland beach.

The 14-year-old’s heroics come as surf lifesavers reveal they fear more lives will be lost in the water unless they are better funded.

Ilynah and her friend Fabian were part of a youth outing to Point Chevalier Beach on December 8 organised by their church — Manurewa’s Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.

Ilynah’s aunt, and caregiver, Jacqui Itamua, said a group of kids were doing bombs off a platform out in the water. All seemed well until around an hour later, when she heard a commotion.

She ran down to the beach from her spot up on the railing and saw her two girls dragging their friend Fabian — who had lost consciousn­ess — through the water towards the shore.

For Ilynah it was a case of being in the right place at the right time — she had learned several surf lifesaving skills at a school camp module run by Surf Life Saving Northern Region, just the week before.

The avid swimmer, who has just finished her Year 10 studies, told the Weekend Herald she heard Fabian calling out to her and quickly realised he was in a bad way.

“All I heard was help — and he was just popping up and down because the water was pushing him,” she said.

Ilynah swam over to him, with the boy revealing he couldn’t swim.

“I was trying to hold him and pull him in, and then I called to his brother and his cousin to come and help me.”

Fear set in, Ilynah said, when Fabian fell unconsciou­s in her arms.

She began rushing to pull him into shore faster. Her sister Luquerah also came to help.

The rescue was made difficult by a big tree sticking up out of the water, which the girls had to pull Fabian’s limp body up and over.

An ambulance was called, but the drama wasn’t over — Jacqui said the boy started seizuring and, though he was breathing, he didn’t regain consciousn­ess.

Fabian was rushed to Starship children’s hospital where he recovered quickly. Incredibly, the boy managed to return to the beach to thank Ilynah and Luquerah later that afternoon.

Jacqui said she was immensely proud of the pair following the event.

“Ilynah was proud of herself, but just very shaken up about the experience,” she said.

“After the ambulance had gone, she told me ‘oh mum, I just learnt that three days ago’.

“And then I just pulled both of my girls in together and we said a prayer of gratitude to the man above.”

The incident highlighte­d swimming skills were a “must, not a plus”, Jacqui said.

Ilynah was a keen swimmer and

She told me ‘oh mum, I just learnt that three days ago’.

Jacqui Itamua

was considerin­g training as a lifeguard in the future.

She said it was a good feeling being able to help other people out.

Gareth Leadbeater, associate principal of Onehunga High School, was “blown away” when he heard about the rescue.

“Very, very proud of the girls in terms of what they’ve done. Especially in terms of actually having the confidence to see somebody in trouble and actually recognise that she needed to help.”

Surf Life Saving New Zealand’s community education manager Claire Cotter said “community education is our number one preventati­ve measure”.

Last summer eight people lost their lives in drowning incidents that Water Safety New Zealand deemed “preventabl­e”.

And surf lifesaving officials fear more people will needlessly die at our beaches due to stretched resources and a lack of funding.

Matt Williams, Surf Life Saving Northern Region chief executive, said more than $9 million in additional funding was needed over the next three years for essential upgrades.

Williams said in the last financial year the service brought in a little less than $7.1m. Currently, 32 per cent of SLSNR’s annual funding was considered volatile, and at risk of not being available for future years

In mid-2018, Auckland Council allocated the northern region $3.7m in funding to support upgrades of facilities at North Piha, Kariotahi and Orewa.

Williams cited population growth and a spread in holiday hotspots as factors driving pressures for more funding.

Drownings, and near drownings, at spots like Goat Island in recent years made it clear there was a need to expand the list of locations where the service operated.

He said successive years of funding shortfalls were now having a “significan­t impact”.

And he said that made it difficult to deliver plans to expand services at surf hotspots.

Williams said there was a need to extend coverage or provide more service at locations like Piha, Muriwai and the other West Coast beaches.

At Pakiri Beach, north of Auckland, a man drowned the Saturday after the final weekend patrol last summer.

Craig Gledhill, who co-ordinated the Red Beach patrol at Pakiri, said the drowning was a “contributi­ng factor” to the extended patrol dates at Pakiri this summer.

Patrols at Red Beach would now run from late December to the end of March — a longer period than in previous years.

“We need better facilities, because we still really only patrol up there under a pop-up tent,” Gledhill said. “This will be the third summer that we’ve built a scaffoldin­g tower so that we’ve got an observatio­n point on the sand dunes.”

A Government spokespers­on said the water safety sector was funded through a wide range of sources, including Government funding, fuel levies, NZ search and rescue and local councils.

“A significan­t programme of work is under way . . . to consider all of these different sources of funding and to work out the best way to ensure the sector’s long-term sustainabi­lity.”

 ?? Photo / Doug Sherring ?? Ilynah and Luquerah Itamua saved their friend from drowning at Point Chevalier Beach using skills learned at a school camp run by Surf Life Saving Northern Region the week before.
Photo / Doug Sherring Ilynah and Luquerah Itamua saved their friend from drowning at Point Chevalier Beach using skills learned at a school camp run by Surf Life Saving Northern Region the week before.

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