The Borneo Post

Australian woman killed by shark ‘bigger than a boat’ in latest attack

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SYDNEY: A woman was fatally mauled by a huge shark – described by witnesses as larger than their boat – near the western Australian city of Perth yesterday.

The attack on the woman off the northern Perth suburb of Mindarie comes just two days after a surfer died after having his leg bitten off by a shark along the same coastline.

Western Australia state police said the woman – reported to be a 60-year- old diver – had “significan­t injuries that are consistent with a shark attack”.

Police Inspector Danny Mulligan added that three fishermen who tried to help the woman and her partner described the shark as being longer than their 5.3-metre boat.

He said the woman’s diving partner felt “something go past him” when he was in the water.

“When he surfaced he saw a commotion in the water and then another boat arrived to pull him out of the water, and then it was noticed that the lady had suffered some severe and fatal injuries,” Mulligan said according to the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n.

“Given the nature of the injuries and the location of the incident, it is likely that a large white shark greater than three metres in size is responsibl­e,” the state’s Department of Fisheries said it a statement. The department added that it had deployed “capture gear” – reported to be drum lines – to “fish for the shark” after the at t ack, which happened one kilometre offshore.

Surf Life Saving WA tweeted earlier yesterday that a 4.5-metre shark had been reportedly sighted offshore from Mindarie.

Local beaches were closed after the incident. The suspected attack came

two days after Ben Gerring – a surfer who lost a leg in a mauling off Falcon Beach some 115 kilometres south of Mindarie on Tuesday – died in hospital.

The 29-year- old was with a group of surfers when what is believed to have been a great white shark pounced on him, ripping off his right leg above the knee and snapping

his surfboard in half.

A 4.2- metre shark caught on Wednesday near to where the attack occurred was destroyed at sea, although authoritie­s could not confirm whether it was responsibl­e.

Deadly attacks are relatively rare, according to the Internatio­nal Shark Attack File, which in February reported a record 98 shark attacks worldwide last year. —

AFP

 ??  ?? Ambulance and police officers helping a critically injured surfer after a shark ripped off his leg in an attack in Australia’s west coast. — AFP photo
Ambulance and police officers helping a critically injured surfer after a shark ripped off his leg in an attack in Australia’s west coast. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? File photo shows a surfer carries his board into the water next to a sign declaring a shark sighting on Sydney’s Manly Beach. — Reuters photo
File photo shows a surfer carries his board into the water next to a sign declaring a shark sighting on Sydney’s Manly Beach. — Reuters photo

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