| 7-12-2004 |
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Victim's brother:
Don't kill shark
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| AP |
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -- The
death of a surfer mauled by a shark has rekindled debate over
the safety of people swimming off Australia's world-renowned
beaches but also the plight of sharks, some species of which
are being hunted to the brink of extinction.
Bradley Adrian Smith, 29, died Saturday afternoon after
being savaged in the Indian Ocean off Left Handers Beach,
south of Western Australia state capital, Perth.
Witnesses said Smith tried to fight off at least one and
possibly two sharks, which officials said most likely were
great whites, although they said they could also have been
bronze whaler sharks.
Authorities Monday continued to hunt for the killer shark
and said they would likely shoot it if they can conclusively
prove they have found the animal responsible for Smith's
death.
But the shark also found an unlikely ally -- with the dead
surfer's brother saying the animal should not be killed.
"I don't believe that the shark should be killed just
for the sake of what's happened in this situation," Stephen
Smith told reporters on Sunday. "I don't believe that
Brad can be revenged by killing a shark."
In many parts of the world, great white sharks, which can
grow to 23 feet in length, are listed as an endangered species.
They breed at a slow rate and have in the past been targeted
by hunters or accidentally caught in fishermen's nets.
Other smaller species of shark are being decimated by fishermen
who hunt them for their fins -- a delicacy in some Asian
nations -- cutting off the fin before dumping the animal
back in the ocean to die.
Orin Lifshitz, head curator at the Aquarium of Western Australia
in Perth, said hunting for and killing the shark would be
not only difficult, but pointless.
"If you hunt him, so what? A day later another one
cannot come and kill someone else?" he told The Associated
Press in a telephone interview.
But while many conservationists appeal for sharks to be
better protected from humans, authorities in beachside suburbs
are more interested in ensuring swimmers are safe.
Many of Australia's most popular beaches are protected by
giant nets intended to prevent humans and sharks swimming
in the same water.
But even that apparently benign way of preventing attacks
has fierce critics, who say the death toll such nets inflict
on animals like whales and turtles is not justified given
the rarity of shark attacks.
The death last year of an 84-year-old man killed while swimming
in an Australian canal linked to the nearby Pacific Ocean
was one of only four fatal shark attacks around the world
in 2003, according to an international list compiled by Florida
Museum of Natural History.
Kate Davey, national coordinator of the Australian Marine
Conservation Society, said swimmers and surfers should be
educated better about the threats posed by sharks.
"Instead of pretending that this issue doesn't exist,
and saying put up nets and then we can protect everybody
from sharks, what we actually need is a public education
campaign to teach people how to live with sharks," Davey
said.
Email:
moun@moun.com |