Yahoo – AFP,
30 May 2016
A woman is feared dead after being seized by a crocodile during a late-night swim at a beach in northern Australia as her friend struggled to save her, police said Monday.
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Crocodiles
are common in Australia's tropical north and they kill an average
of two people
each year (AFP Photo/William West)
|
A woman is feared dead after being seized by a crocodile during a late-night swim at a beach in northern Australia as her friend struggled to save her, police said Monday.
The women
went for a stroll on Thornton Beach on Sunday evening in the far north of
Queensland state before making a fateful decision to take a dip in an area
known to be infested with crocodiles.
"The
woman was swimming with a female friend, also in her 40s, at 10.30pm when the
incident occurred," police said in a statement.
Nine News
cited witnesses as hearing the woman yell "A croc's got me, a croc's got
me!"
Senior
Constable Russell Parker said the women -- Australians visiting the area --
were in the water when one of them was grabbed, with her friend desperately
trying to drag her to safety.
"They
decided to take a swim in the ocean just in waist-deep water and at that point,
we believe that a crocodile has taken one of the women, taken hold of
her," he told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
"Her
friend tried valiantly to drag her to the shore but unfortunately wasn't able
to do so and the woman subsequently disappeared.
"Now
her friend raised the alarm with a nearby business and they subsequently
contacted the police."
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Data on
most commonly occuring animal-related deaths in Australia
(AFP Photo/John
SAEKI)
|
A rescue
helicopter was sent up with thermal imaging equipment but was unable to find
her.
Parker
added that the surviving woman was "very, very shaken and shocked"
but appeared to have escaped with only grazes.
The
Brisbane Courier-Mail said Thornton Beach was next to a creek where
croc-spotting tours were organised, and there were plenty of warning signs
throughout the vicinity.
The attack
is not the first in the area. A giant crocodile known as Big Jim took local
postal worker Beryl Wruck in 1985 when she had a late-night swim about an
hour's drive from Thornton Beach.
Crocodiles
are common in Australia's tropical north and kill an average of two people each
year.
Earlier
this month, a desperate fisherman threw spanners and spark plugs to fight off
circling crocodiles after his friend drowned when one of the animals overturned
their small boat near Darwin.
Crocodile
numbers have increased since the introduction of protection laws in 1971, with
estimates putting the Northern Territory's population in the wild at about
100,000.


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