Cape Town sharing waters with deadly sharks
S AFRICA: Undetected on the mountain slope, Tino Simmerie
sweeps his binoculars over the South African bay where bathers happily splash
about in turquoise waters.
"They don't have a clue what's going on
basically," he said, staring out at the popular Fish Hoek beach where he
once saw a shark come up to the shore.
"We never know for sure when a shark is going to come
into this bay -- that's why we're every day up here to just keep an eye
out." Armed with a walkie-talkie, binoculars and polarised sunglasses to
protect against the harsh ocean glare, the 22-year-old is part of Cape Town's
frontline against the Great Whites sharing its seas.
The pioneering programme, Shark Spotters, started in 2004
after a spate of bites and sightings by placing human look-outs at busy beaches
to give the alert for the sea to be cleared if fins are seen moving in.
South Africa records fewer attacks than other shark hotspots
such as Australia and the United States. But the fatality rate is high: South
Africa accounts for one-third of the 24 deaths worldwide on the International
Shark Attack File for the past three years, despite local bites making up less
than 10 percent of all attacks.
The latest victim was a young Cape Town bodyboarder who died
on April 19 after his leg was bitten off at a remote surfing spot, which
followed a near-fatal mauling in September across the bay at top swimming site
Fish Hoek.
Attacks in the age of Twitter have sparked alerts of
"dinosaur huge" killers -- as tweeted by a witness to a 2010 death on
Fish Hoek -- and fierce debate over theories of why bites are on the increase.
"You can understand, it's a very emotional issue especially for the people
who have witnessed shark attacks," said Sarah Titley, Shark Spotters
project manager. "Being eaten by a very large fish is a very scary unknown
that makes people react in a completely disproportionate way to what the actual
sense of risk is. You've got a one in 253 million chance of being killed by a
shark." "So the risk is very small but it's such a traumatic event
for people and it really does cause a lot of hype and hysteria." -- 'We
don't want to kill the sharks' To counter some of the fears, an exclusion net
is on the cards for Fish Hoek, to add another layer to the city's prevention
buffers after the attack seven months ago deepened its deadly reputation on the
back of two deaths since 2004.
AFP
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