MELBOURNE, Australia: A shark killed a woman and seriously wounded a man taking an early morning swim with her at a national park beach on Australia’s east coast Thursday, police said.
Experts say a shark rarely attacks more than one person.
The attack occurred at Crowdy Bay National Park, which is known for beach camping, fishing spots and hiking tracks 360 kilometers (224 miles) north of Sydney.
Beaches in the area and to the north of the attack were closed to swimmers indefinitely, Police Chief Insp. Timothy Bayly said.
Emergency services were called to Kylies Beach following reports that two people in their mid-20s had been bitten by a shark at 6:30 a.m., Bayly said.
Bayly declined to detail the injuries or the circumstances of the attack. “At this stage, all I’m prepared to say is they were known to each other and they were going for a swim and the shark attacked,” Bayly told reporters.
A bystander helped the pair on the beach before ambulance paramedics arrived, but the woman died at the scene.
The man was flown by helicopter to a hospital, and paramedic Josh Smyth said the man’s condition was serious but stable.
Smyth said the bystander’s first aid might have prevented a double fatality.
“I just really need to have a shoutout to the bystander on the beach who put a makeshift tourniquet on the male’s leg which obviously potentially saved his life and allowed New South Wales Ambulance paramedics to get to him and render first aid,” Smyth told reporters.
The identities of the man and woman were not released.
The Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs said the two were Swiss nationals. “The Swiss Consulate General in Sydney is in contact with the local authorities and is supporting the relatives within the framework of consular protection,” it said in a statement.
Scientists had determined the couple had been attacked by a large bull shark, a state government statement said.
Five drumlines — baited hooks suspended from floats — were deployed off Kylies Beach in an attempt to catch the shark, the government said.
Drumlines had already been put in place to the north at Port Macquarie and to the south at Forster to reduce shark numbers.
Gavin Naylor, director of the University of Florida’s shark research program and manager of the International Shark Attack File database, said a single shark attacking more than one person was exceptionally rare.
“It is very unusual. Individual shark attacks are rare. And shark attacks on two people by the same individual is not unheard of, but it’s very rare,” Naylor said.
Naylor said he would need to know details of the sequence of the shark’s behavior Thursday to understand what had motivated it to bite.
Two British tourists were attacked by a single shark while snorkeling on the Great Barrier Reef off Australia’s northeast coast in 2019. One lost a foot and the other suffered leg injuries.
A shark fatally mauled a surfer off a Sydney beach in September. Two sections of the surfboard were recovered.
Shark kills woman, seriously wounds another swimmer in Australia
https://arab.news/9f3hd
Shark kills woman, seriously wounds another swimmer in Australia
- Experts say a single shark attacking more than one person is extremely rare
- Bystander praised for helping save life of victim who survived
Makkah museum displays world’s largest Qur’an
MAKKAH: The Holy Qur’an Museum at the Hira Cultural District in Makkah is showcasing a monumental handwritten copy of the Holy Qur’an, recognized as the largest Qur’an of its kind in the world.
The manuscript measures 312 cm by 220 cm and comprises 700 pages, earning the museum recognition from Guinness World Records for displaying the world’s largest Qur’an, the Saudi Press Agency reported.
The manuscript is a magnified reproduction of a historic Qur’an dating back to the 16th century, the SPA stated.
The original copy measures 45 cm by 30 cm, with the chapters written primarily in Thuluth script, while Surah Al-Fatiha was penned in Naskh, reflecting the refined artistic choices and calligraphic diversity of the era.
The Qur’an is a unique example of Arabic calligraphy, gilding and bookbinding, showcasing Islamic art through intricate decorations, sun-shaped motifs on the opening folio, and elaborately designed frontispiece and title pages that reflect a high level of artistic mastery.
The manuscript was endowed as a waqf in 1883. Its original version is currently preserved at the King Abdulaziz Complex for Endowment Libraries, serving as a lasting testament to Muslims’ enduring reverence for the Qur’an and the richness of Islamic arts across the centuries.










