The Daily Telegraph

Boy, 10, attacked in ‘walk with sharks’ tank

Victim in a stable condition after witnesses saw ‘pool of blood’ as his leg was bitten at Bahamas resort

- By Benedict Smith

A 10-YEAR-OLD boy has been bitten on the leg in a “shark tank” attraction at a luxury Bahamas resort.

Witnesses say they saw a “pool of blood” in the water after the boy, from Maryland, USA, was attacked. He was taken to hospital for treatment to a leg injury and is in a stable condition, authoritie­s said yesterday.

The incident is reported to have taken place at the Atlantis Resort, a 400-acre tourist trap made up of hotels, casinos and water parks which dominates the island.

Local police said they had launched an investigat­ion without specifying the exact location. But witnesses described the attack in detail to NBC News.

The Atlantis retreat offers a “walk with the sharks adventure”, according to a webpage that has since been taken down.

Participan­ts do not need to be able to swim and can go “nose-to-nose” with Caribbean reef sharks and nurse sharks in a designated pool.

“Once the little boy came down it took a dark turn,” a witness told US media. “We saw the shark just homing in on him and then just a pool of blood afterwards.”

The screaming child was reportedly taken to a nursing station on the island as the rest of the visitors fled.

Publicity photos on the Atlantis website show holiday-makers in wetsuits and modified diving gear walking surrounded by sharks.

A descriptio­n reads: “Using state-ofthe-art clear glass helmets, resort guests can walk on the bottom of the shark exhibit and find themselves noseto-nose with the guardians of the lost world of Atlantis. No swimming experience necessary.” Visitors can also view the sharks from a clear plastic tunnel at the bottom of a five-storey slide.

The holiday resort has seven different species of shark, including 7ft pacific blacktip sharks and great hammerhead sharks, which can grow up to 20ft.

Just one of the species, the bonnethead shark, is listed as being harmless to humans.

Others, like the Zebra Shark, are generally considered docile but have been known to bite swimmers and divers when provoked.

An article about “shark awareness” on the Atlantis website notes: “Sharks are often feared, but in reality they have more to fear from humans and are important to the marine ecosystem.”

The Royal Bahamas Police Force said in a statement: “A 10-year-old male child from Maryland, USA, was reportedly bitten by a shark shortly before 4pm on Monday.

“Preliminar­y reports indicate that the boy was bitten on the right leg by a shark while participat­ing in an expedition in a shark tank at a local resort.

“He was transporte­d to the hospital for medical attention and is currently in a stable condition. Investigat­ions are ongoing into this incident.”

Last month, a 44-year-old from Boston, Massachuse­tts, was killed by a shark while she was paddleboar­ding off the coast of New Providence in the Bahamas.

Lauren Erickson Van Wart was pulled onto a boat by a lifeguard but died at the scene, suffering “significan­t trauma to the right side of her body”.

A 47-year-old German woman went missing in an apparent shark attack while on a diving trip off the island of Grand Bahama last November. She is believed to have been attacked by a tiger shark off an area known as Tiger Beach.

Atlantis Bahamas has been approached for comment.

‘We saw the shark homing in on [the boy] and then just a pool of blood afterwards’

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 ?? ?? Atlantis Resort in the Caribbean gives guests the chance to come ‘nose-to-nose’ with sharks or view them from a tunnel, below
Atlantis Resort in the Caribbean gives guests the chance to come ‘nose-to-nose’ with sharks or view them from a tunnel, below

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