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Shark rips Wild Coast lifeguard into pieces

January 26th, 2009
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Source: iol.co.za

A lifeguard watched in horror as his friend was torn apart by a giant shark off Port St Johns in Port Elizabeth at the weekend.

Sikhanyiso Bangilizwe, 25, of Port St Johns, was bitten in half by what is suspected to be atiger shark while he was catching waves off Second Beach with a friend on Saturday.

He was a member of the Wild Coast Guards and was off-duty. 

He is the second lifeguard in two years to have been killed by a shark at the Eastern Cape resort. 

Police station commissioner Morgan Naicker said the shark had bitten off Bangilizwe’s right arm, shoulder, part of his back and buttock.

“This is a relatively safe beach. This is a sad incident.” 

Lifeguard Sibulele Masiza was killed by a shark in January 2007.

“We assume that Masiza was bitten by a tiger shark, his flippers were found with shark teeth marks, but his body was not recovered,” Naicker said.

Bangilizwe was his family’s breadwinner, said Tshintshekile Nduve, a fellow lifeguard.

Nduve said he and Bangilizwe were swimming at a familiar spot on Saturday.

“He was catching waves in the water further from where I was and when we passed the waves, I heard his cries.

“I saw he was in trouble and the shark on him, I saw blood and I went out of the water to get help.” 

When lifeguards got a boat into the sea, it was too late, Nduve said.

He said he had had trouble sleeping since seeing his friend being savaged by the shark.

“To see him die has made it difficult for me to sleep. I wish I could get pills so that I don’t get troubled. 

“I am not well, but I will continue to go into the water as a lifeguard.” 

Vuyo Maza, one of the lifeguards who sped to the scene by boat, said he was at the tower when the attack took place.

Maza said he had not seen such horror before.

“When we went out to the water Bangilizwe was dead, his body was badly injured, we could see his insides - it was the scariest thing I have ever seen.”

The shark ripped Bangilizwe’s body into three pieces.

Wild Coast Guards managing director Khaya Mjo said the beach had been closed for swimming after the attack.

Tiger Shark

Persistent killer whale

January 26th, 2009
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Sharks Rampage in Australia

January 12th, 2009
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Source: Time

A surfboard, bitten by a shark in Binalong Bay, near St Helens, Tasmania on January 12, 2009

A surfboard, bitten by a shark in Binalong Bay, near St Helens, Tasmania on January 12, 2009

Swimmers at Australian beaches are usually reassured by statistics that indicate they are more likely to be struck by lightning than chomped by a shark. But, after three non-fatal shark attacks in the country in less than 48 hours and a deadly one last month, some are wondering if the odds have changed — and whether Australia’s efforts to protect sharks are to blame. (Read “When Adventure Tourism Kills.”)

Australia’s summer of shark terror began Dec. 27 when local banker Brian Guest went missing while snorkling off a beach south of Perth in Western Australia. A search located a few tattered pieces of wetsuit belonging to the 51-year-old. Authorities concluded he had been killed by a large white pointer shark spotted near the beach. (See the top 10 animal stories of 2008.)

That attack was followed by several more. On Jan. 11, a man surfing near Fingal Head in northern New South Wales was bitten on the thigh. Jonathon Beard, 31, made it to shore and survived after his friends used the leg rope from his surf board to stem the bleeding.

The same day Hannah Mighall, 13, was surfing in Binalong Bay off the Tasmania coast in Australia’s far south, when she screamed and was dragged under the water by what authorities suspect was a large white pointer. Her cousin paddled to the injured girl and dragged her to safety while being circled by the shark. On Jan. 12, a man snorkeling in a tidal lake in New South Wales was bitten on the leg, probably by a bull shark. Authorities reported the man punched the shark in the nose and made it to shore with about 40 puncture wounds. All of the victims are recovering.

According to records kept by Taronga Park Zoo in Sydney, 193 people have been killed by sharks in Australia over the past 200 years. In recent years, shark deaths in Australian waters have averaged about one per year.

Researchers play down the significance of the unusual spate of attacks. They point out that more people are entering the ocean, increasing the chances of an encounter. “The human population is expanding at a rate of knots,” says Rory McAuley, a senior research scientist with the West Australian Fisheries Department. “Not only is it getting larger, it’s getting more dispersed, so people are getting into the water over a greater area of the shark’s range. It’s probably likely to expect to see an increase in shark sightings and attacks.”

But some fisherman and others complain Australia’s efforts to protect sharks — catching rare white pointer sharks is illegal, for example — is resulting in an increase in attacks. In particular, they object to a policy of letting suspected man-eaters go. “Sharks do hang around after the attack and the government has a duty of care to deal with it,” says Queensland fisherman Vic Hislop. Sharks “learn to kill humans. They learn to go in hard and fast.”

The deadly Dec. 27 attack in West Australia has rekindled this long-running controversy. After Guest, the banker, was killed, a volunteer rescue boat and a rescue helicopter located a shark matching the description of the killer but took no action.

Guest’s family said they did not want the shark harmed. “He (Guest) didn’t want people going out there willy-nilly destroying animals who were just doing what animals do,” said Guest’s son, Daniel, who had been snorkling with his father on the day he went missing. But others were outraged. “The shark had the man in his stomach digesting him and (authorities) are just driving the boat over and around him,” says Hislop, who is an outspoken critic of the government’s preservation policies and runs a tourist shark display featuring models of maneaters on Queensland’s coast.

Hislop and others maintain that sharks develop a taste for people and can be repeat offenders. Says Hugh Edwards, a West Australian author and fisherman who has been filming documentaries on sharks for more than 20 years: “I tend to agree that individual sharks can be responsible for more than one attack.” Edwards suggests that they should be killed, “as long as you know that its definitely the right shark.”

But scientists reject such arguments as ill-informed. “There is no evidence that sharks become repeat attackers,” says McAuley, who heads a shark and ray sustainability program for the Fisheries department. “We have had a number of years between fatal shark attacks in West Australia, which is the clearest indication that sharks don’t learn to predate humans.”

McAuley acknowledges the number of attacks may have increased lately. But he maintains this is not because shark numbers have increased dramatically due to successful preservation programs, as some have argued. White pointer sharks, for example, take 20 years to reach maturity, do not give birth every year and have few offspring. “Any increase would take in the order of decades,” McAuley says.

Australian officials have taken what steps they can to minimize man-shark encounters. The states of Queensland and New South Wales have strung nets off popular surfing beaches to keep sharks out. The Queensland Government says there has not been a fatal attack on a netted beach since they were introduced in the 1960s, but critics say the nets kill turtles, dolphins and sometimes whales. In Victoria, South Australia, West Australia and Tasmania, authorities rely on aerial spotters and lifeguards who alert swimmers when a suspicious shape appears in the surf.

But the attitude of many is: swim at your own risk — and leave the sharks alone. As Guest reportedly wrote on an anglers website before he died: “[Sharks] got a right to be there, we’ve got a right to go there and there are risks associated with everything, but I don’t believe the correct way of reducing our risk is to kill the shark.” Luckily for the sharks, most Australians seem to think the same way.

Shark Attack